From "partisan Cleansing" to Power-sharing?: Lessons for Security from Colombia's National FrontCenter for International Security and Arms Control, Stanford University, 1995 - 50 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 11
Page 15
... military government step aside and permit the civilian political elites to rule : The major alternatives to some version of shared two - party rule were extended and increasingly unstable military rule or an attempt to promote one ...
... military government step aside and permit the civilian political elites to rule : The major alternatives to some version of shared two - party rule were extended and increasingly unstable military rule or an attempt to promote one ...
Page 16
... regime in a direction similar to that of Peron's Argentina , not out of a paramount commitment to civilian rule . The United States and other donor countries were happy to extend support to more brutal , neighboring military regimes in ...
... regime in a direction similar to that of Peron's Argentina , not out of a paramount commitment to civilian rule . The United States and other donor countries were happy to extend support to more brutal , neighboring military regimes in ...
Page 17
... military rule , which started in 1953 . Although the Rojas Pinilla regime did not represent the same sort of routinized military rule that existed in Central America during this period or the more institutionalized rule in the Southern ...
... military rule , which started in 1953 . Although the Rojas Pinilla regime did not represent the same sort of routinized military rule that existed in Central America during this period or the more institutionalized rule in the Southern ...
Common terms and phrases
Alfonso Lopez Michelsen analysts ANAPO armed forces Arms Control Berry bipartisan Bushnell Center for International civilian rule Colombia Colombia's National Front Congress Conservative party consociational arrangement consociational democracy consociationalism constitutional reform Corporatism corporatist costs countries democratic depoliticization divided economic elections emergence epiphenomenal ethnic factions factors Gonzalo Sanchez eds Government in Colombia guerrilla Hartlyn Horowitz interest groups international actors International Security Kline La Violencia Latin America Leal Liberal and Conservative Lijphart main parties Marc Chernick Marc W Mariano Ospina Perez ments Michael McFaul military rule mutual veto National Front agreements National Front contributed negotiated Nuclear Weapons Oquist participation Partisan Cleansing partisan divisions party identification party-based violence Peace Penaranda permissive conditions Pizarro plural societies political parties Politics of Compromise power-sharing agreements power-sharing arrangements power-sharing devices presidency prevent reduced Rojas Pinilla role Schmitter Security and Arms sharing Stanford University tion traditional parties Transaction Books Violence in Colombia Violencia votes