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Ideology, National Security, and the Corporate State: The Historiography of U.S.-Latin American Relations
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2022
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- Copyright © 1992 by the University of Texas Press
References
Notes
1. David Sheinin, “The United States and Argentina, 1910–1929,” Ph.D. diss., University of Connecticut, 1989.
2. Charles Bergquist, Coffee and Conflict in Colombia, 1886–1910 (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1978); David Johnson, “What Coffee Wrought and Did Not: The Regional Origins of Colombia's War of the Thousand Days,“ paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association, May 1990, Vancouver, B.C.; and Catherine LeGrand, Frontier Expansion and Peasant Protest in Colombia, 1830–1936 (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1986).
3. See Gabriel Kolko, Confronting the Third World: United States Foreign Policy, 1945–1960 (New York: Pantheon, 1988); Michael Hogan, “Corporatism,” Journal of American History 77, no. 1 (June 1990):153–60; Hogan, “Revival and Reform: America's Twentieth-Century Search for a New Economic Order Abroad,” Diplomatic History 8 (Fall 1984):287–310; and Thomas J. McCormick, “Drift or Mastery? A Corporatist Synthesis for American Diplomatic History,” Reviews in American History 10 (Dec. 1982):318–30.
4. Raúl Benítez Manaut et al., Viejos desafíos, nuevas perspectivas: México-Estados Unidos y América Latina (Mexico City: Miguel Angel Porrúa, 1988); and Juan G. Tokatlian and Rodrigo Pardo, Política exterior de Colombia (Bogotá: Tercer Mundo, 1988).
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