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Latin American Trade Relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Shirley Christian*
Affiliation:
Latin America for The New York Times, The Miami Herald and Associated Press, University of Kansas

Extract

There has always been a certain attitude in Washington having to do with Latin America. It is that Latin America is not quite a grown-up place and, therefore, is worthy of intense US interest only when the region, or part of it, falls into a crisis that crosses paths with one of the US hot-button issues of the moment: drugs, immigration, human rights, communism (until recently) and, farther back, fascism. In other words, Latin America has been worthy of attention only when the United States decided to “do good” (e.g., human rights crusades), incorporate the region into efforts at solving US domestic problems (e.g., drugs), or needed firm support from the region in some international effort (e.g., the Cold War and World War II).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1997

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