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Latin America: Revolution and Reaction in to the 21 st Century. Overall Trends in L.America. 19 th Century = Independence from Europe Rise of the Caudillos (dictators) and increasing involvement by U.S. (economic)
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Latin America: Revolution and Reaction in to the 21st Century
Overall Trends in L.America 19th Century = Independence from Europe Rise of the Caudillos (dictators) and increasing involvement by U.S. (economic) Early 20th Century = Hurt economies by WWI and Great Depression strengthen caudillos Calls for revolution and change Post war 20th Century= Caudillos overthrown but usually led to communist governments leads to U.S. involvement to get rid of communism Return to dictators and then finally unstable republics
Mexico • PRI dominated politics for most of the 20th century but support shifted from peasants to all people and was eventually undone by corruption and lack of social improvement • Zapatistas uprising- government responded with repression and negotiation • NAFTA- North American Free Trade Agreement- increases trade by lowering barriers (tariffs) • 2000 election of Vicente Fox ended PRI domination
Guatemala • Pop. mostly illiterate, poor health conditions • 1944 Juan Jose Arevalo- president- began reform but came into conflict with United Fruit Company • 1951 Jacobo Arbenz- more radical leader who wanted to nationalize industry and got help from the USSR • U.S. responds to Arbenz’s changes with economic and diplomatic restrictions • 1954 U.S. invades Guatemala and replaces it with a U.S. – friendly regime
Cuban Revolution • High U.S. interest in Cuba- By 1950s 75% of Cuban imports were U.S. • 1934-1944 Fulgencio Batista- authoritarian leader who had reform programs that were ineffective • July 1953 Fidel Castro launched an unsuccessful attack on military barracks • Fled to Mexico and got help from Che Guevara • 1958 the “26th of July Movement” • Castro’s changes- centralized socialist economy, 1961 cut off ties with U.S. and turned toward Soviet Union • 1961 Cuban Missile Crisis • Results of revolution mixed- social programs extensive but attempts to strengthen economy not as successful
Soldiers Take Power • As the L. American military became more professional, they began to see themselves as above the selfish interests of politicians • 1960s military began to intervene directly: 1964 Brazilian military (with U.S. support) overthrew the elected president; 1966 Argentina; 1973 Chile- overthrew Salvador Allende • Once in power had new type of bureaucratic authoritarian rule (silenced critics. Dirty war in Argentina where many disappeared) • Working class hit hardest by gov. economic policies. Structural problems still existed- land ownership remained the same • All nationalistic leaders
Return to Democratic Rule • Mid-1980s military began to return gov. to civilian politicians partly because cold war was over and U.S. wouldn’t be so heavily involved • Huge debt from loans taken in the 1970s • Drug trade
After WWI- U. S. emerged as dominant power in the hemisphere • Private investments and loans from the U. S. were chief means of influence • Banana Republics • Foreign intervention led to growing nationalist reaction • Roosevelt- 1933 – Good Neighbor Policy – deal more fairly with L. America and stop direct U. S. intervention- forgotten about during Cold War • Belief that economic dev. would eliminate popularity of radical forces • 1961 Alliance for Progress- wanted to develop the region economically- but most said it only benefited the elites • Carter treaty to cede Panama control of the Panama Canal
Women in Latin America • After WWI still unequal and no suffrage until 1950s • Slowly women began to organize and demand change • Before WWI women entered the workforce in factories but salaries lower than men’s and they started to join anarchist, socialist, and other labor organizations • By mid-1990s position of women close to w. Europe and N. America- more than any other part of the world