About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title

BOOKS
About the AEI Press
Orders and Shipping
Book Reviews
Press Releases

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Books >  Small Countries, Large Issues
Small Countries, Large Issues
Print Mail
Studies in U.S.-Latin American Asymmetries
By Mark Falcoff
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Small Countries, Large Issues
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: October 1984
Paperback
ISBN: 0-8447-3563-9
Hardcover
ISBN: 0-8447-3562-0

This title is currently out of print, but online booksellers sometimes have used copies available. See links below.

Great discrepancies of power are called asymmetries, a concept that many Latin American nations find most useful for describing their relations with the United States. The author differs with many social scientists who assume that the United States can always calibrate its power to achieve a desired outcome. He focuses on the way asymmetries operate in the relations of the United States with Cuba, Uruguay, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Chile. This book is an exercise partly in historiography, partly in political science, and partly in the larger study of international relations. It explores those "gray areas" where national power is often a matter more of perceptions than of actuality, and it examines how perceptions themselves become an independent variable in the relations between nations.

Mark Falcoff is a resident scholar at AEI.



Table of Contents

Foreword
Preface


The Cuban Revolution and the United States
Uruguay: The Tupamaros on the Silver Screen
El Salvador: The U.S. White Paper Reexamined
Nicaragua: Somoza, Sandino, and United States
Chile: External Forces and the Overthrow of Allende

Index
Related Links
Latin American Outlook
Order from Barnes and Noble


Also by Mark Falcoff
Recent Articles
At War with Itself
Trouble Down Below
Strobe Lite
Latest Book
Cuba the Morning After
Confronting Castro's Legacy
Russia's Revolution

Meticulously researched and textured with fascinating details, these essays "show" as well as "tell" where Russia has been in the past fifteen years and where it is going.


Of Men and Materiel: The Crisis in Military Resources

This book explores a problem that has been building quietly for years: the military has been expending without expanding or even replacing what has been spent.