Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.

The purpose of this thesis is to examine what role, if any, the United States can play in encouraging democratic transitions. It is a comparison of some of the different approaches the United States used in its relations with three countries in which it had varying amounts of influence: Chile (some...

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Main Author: Lasher, David Brian
Other Authors: Bruneau, Thomas C.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28163
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-281632014-11-27T16:17:17Z Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement. Lasher, David Brian Bruneau, Thomas C. NA NA National Security Affairs The purpose of this thesis is to examine what role, if any, the United States can play in encouraging democratic transitions. It is a comparison of some of the different approaches the United States used in its relations with three countries in which it had varying amounts of influence: Chile (some influence), Brazil (relatively little influence), and El Salvador (relatively major influence). The two most fundamental questions it asks are: what would be the best policy for the United States to follow should it decide to encourage a democratic transition in any given country? And assuming a coherent approach, how much of an impact are United States' efforts likely to have? In reference to the first questions, this study finds that a bipartisan foreign policy, prudently using the various instruments at its disposal, is the best course for the United States to follow. As for the second questions, the United States can have an impact on democratic transitions, but that impact is likely to be quite limited in comparison to the influence of other factors (historical, cultural, social, economic, and political) within that country. As such, increase involvement does not necessarily increase the ability of the United States to encourage a democratic transition. It is, in effect, a problematic impact 2013-02-15T23:31:24Z 2013-02-15T23:31:24Z 1991 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28163 o227777539 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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language en_US
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description The purpose of this thesis is to examine what role, if any, the United States can play in encouraging democratic transitions. It is a comparison of some of the different approaches the United States used in its relations with three countries in which it had varying amounts of influence: Chile (some influence), Brazil (relatively little influence), and El Salvador (relatively major influence). The two most fundamental questions it asks are: what would be the best policy for the United States to follow should it decide to encourage a democratic transition in any given country? And assuming a coherent approach, how much of an impact are United States' efforts likely to have? In reference to the first questions, this study finds that a bipartisan foreign policy, prudently using the various instruments at its disposal, is the best course for the United States to follow. As for the second questions, the United States can have an impact on democratic transitions, but that impact is likely to be quite limited in comparison to the influence of other factors (historical, cultural, social, economic, and political) within that country. As such, increase involvement does not necessarily increase the ability of the United States to encourage a democratic transition. It is, in effect, a problematic impact
author2 Bruneau, Thomas C.
author_facet Bruneau, Thomas C.
Lasher, David Brian
author Lasher, David Brian
spellingShingle Lasher, David Brian
Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
author_sort Lasher, David Brian
title Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
title_short Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
title_full Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
title_fullStr Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
title_full_unstemmed Encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of United States' involvement.
title_sort encouraging democratic transitions : the problematic impact of united states' involvement.
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/28163
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