Establishing the need for improvement -- Uplifting begins: the War of 1898 -- Money doctors, democracy doctors, and marines -- Latin American opposition and the retreat from protectorates -- Pledging to be a good neighbor -- Breaking new ground: uplifting institutions -- To improve or not to improve? The Cold War question --Cuba determines the answer -- Losing Panache, entrenching institutions -- The evolution from economic to political improvement -- Promoting good governance.
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In this book, Lars Schoultz explores the culture of "improvement" that defines the attitudes and values shaping all United States policies towards Latin America in the past and present. Schoultz's aim is to find the sources of this political and intellectual culture which has informed our relations with our southern neighbors and which continues to do so despite its faulty premises and its failure to effect change and transformation. Schoultz focuses on two period in the past as critical to embedding the culture and policies of improvement: the Progressive Era, which established the belief in "uplifting" others for their betterment, and the Cold War Era, which established the institutions for sustaining and implementing the process of uplifting a people and state. In Their Own Best Interest: A History of the U.S. Effort to Improve Latin Americans is a powerful historical indictment of a "constellation of beliefs" that has been a central part of Washington's foreign policy establishment and culture. The notion that the United States knows better than its allies and neighbors what is best for each of them resonates beyond Latin America and underlies much of the United States' foreign policies around the world.--
JSTOR
22573/ctvcjjwtz
In their own best interest.
9780674984141
Economic assistance, American-- Latin America-- History.
Politicians-- United States-- Attitudes.
Progressivism (United States politics)
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS-- Development-- Economic Development.
Diplomatic relations-- Philosophy.
Diplomatic relations.
Economic assistance, American.
POLITICAL SCIENCE-- Government-- International.
POLITICAL SCIENCE-- International Relations-- General.
Politicians-- Attitudes.
Progressivism (United States politics)
Latin America, Foreign relations, United States.
United States, Foreign relations, Latin America.
United States, Foreign relations, Moral and ethical aspects.