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Professionalization and Politicization as Mativational Factors in the Brazilian Army Coup of 15 November, 1889
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
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One of the clearest trends in Latin American government during the past decade has been the establishment of military dictatorships in many South American countries, some of them long-term. Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay have all had this experience. In efforts to explain this phenomenon, many scholars have delved into the political history of civil-military relations in Latin American society since 1930. A recent penchant for contemporary history, promoted in part by the availability of funds for policy-oriented research, has stimulated this concern. In the process, however, the deeper historical roots of the institutional development of the Latin American military have been neglected.1
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References
1 An exception to this statement is Nunn's, Frederick M. helpful article ‘The Latin American Military Establishment: Some Thoughts on the Origins of its Socio-Political Role and an Illustrative Bibliographical Essay,’ The Americas, XXVIII, 2 (10, 1970), 135–51.Google Scholar
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