In the following pages, three well-known Latinoamericanists share their views on the current prospects for coups in Latin America. They are: Rut Diamint of the University Torcuatto de Tella in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Pablo Policzer of the University of Calgary in Canada; and Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington, DC. Each looks at the potential for coups from different perspectives but, all three come to similar conclusions. That is, that despite substantial gains in democracy, the threat of coups in Latin America remains latent. The authors agree that democracy is growing in the region. Opinion surveys such as the Americas Barometer consistently show that citizens in Latin America have gradually incorporated democra...
What is the relation between coups d’etat and civil wars? While a wide set of studies have traced th...
In recent days several things have become clearer about the recent coup in Honduras, and its effects...
Brazil now has a president-elect who glorifies the military dictatorship and a general as vice presi...
In the following pages, three well-known Latinoamericanists share their views on the current prospec...
This article systematically assesses whether open political competition ends the coup trap. We use a...
The opposition of several Latin American leaders against the attendance of the Honduran leader, Porf...
There is a burgeoning literature on how to deal with populism in advanced liberal democracies, which...
Coups d’etat, once a commonplace end for democracies in the Americas, have declined sharply in recen...
This research note introduces new global data on military coups. Conventional aggregate data so far ...
On September 11, 1973, the Chilean armed forces staged a coup d’état against their democratically el...
Civil society, according to mainstream democratization literature, has a positive impact on democrat...
Was Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff victim of a coup or removed through a legal process of impeach...
This book presents a new theory for why political regimes emerge, and why they subsequently survive ...
The author argues that references to a uniform "left turn" in the region are misleading, and that La...
The age of military coups has ended, but democracy still confronts major challenges in the early twe...
What is the relation between coups d’etat and civil wars? While a wide set of studies have traced th...
In recent days several things have become clearer about the recent coup in Honduras, and its effects...
Brazil now has a president-elect who glorifies the military dictatorship and a general as vice presi...
In the following pages, three well-known Latinoamericanists share their views on the current prospec...
This article systematically assesses whether open political competition ends the coup trap. We use a...
The opposition of several Latin American leaders against the attendance of the Honduran leader, Porf...
There is a burgeoning literature on how to deal with populism in advanced liberal democracies, which...
Coups d’etat, once a commonplace end for democracies in the Americas, have declined sharply in recen...
This research note introduces new global data on military coups. Conventional aggregate data so far ...
On September 11, 1973, the Chilean armed forces staged a coup d’état against their democratically el...
Civil society, according to mainstream democratization literature, has a positive impact on democrat...
Was Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff victim of a coup or removed through a legal process of impeach...
This book presents a new theory for why political regimes emerge, and why they subsequently survive ...
The author argues that references to a uniform "left turn" in the region are misleading, and that La...
The age of military coups has ended, but democracy still confronts major challenges in the early twe...
What is the relation between coups d’etat and civil wars? While a wide set of studies have traced th...
In recent days several things have become clearer about the recent coup in Honduras, and its effects...
Brazil now has a president-elect who glorifies the military dictatorship and a general as vice presi...