Beschreibung:
This volume suggests Pan-Americanism played a central and lasting role in structuring inter-American relations, because of the ways in which the movement was reinvented over time, and because the actors who shaped it often redefined and redeployed the term.
Introduction: The Pan-American Shift from Apology for Empire to Imperial Critique to Latin American Agency 1. Imperial Pan-Americanism 2. Architects, Exchange, and the Consolidation of Pan-American Cooperation, 1914-40 3. Becoming the Third World: Pan-Americanism, South Americanism, and Liberal Economics in the 1920s 4. Pan-American Intellectual Cooperation: Emergence, Institutionalization, and Fields of Action 5. Popular Pan-Americanism, North and South: International Relations and the Idea of "American Unity" in Argentina and the United States, 1939-45 6. The Colombo-Lanusse Doctrine: Cold War Anti-interventionism and the End of Pan-Americanism 7. Pan-American Human Rights: The Legacy of Pan-Americanism and the Intellectual Origins of the Inter-American Human Rights System 8. Epilogue: Pan-Americanism and the Changing Nature of US Hegemony