Latin American dictatorship There is no history of the military dictatorship of Latin America and the history of economic exploitation and intervention in the region. The history of slavery and other forced labor pursuing large scale agriculture and resource exploitation during the colonial era has created a heritage of economic exploitation. In many cases, such poverty and inequality leads to the popular uprising and seeks reform. It provides reasons (or excuses depending on your perspective) to use power to regain discipline.
The wave of the military dictatorship in Latin America in the second half of the 20th century left a special sign in Latin American culture. In Latin American literature, dictators' novels are challenging the dictatorship as an important genre. There are also many movies depicting military dictatorship in Latin America. The government tends to be between traditional democracy and non-democratic forms. These forms of governments usually distinguish who is governing the state, how good the power is, and how the leaders and the government make up the organization based on these reasons.
For IPA, Nazism, Communism, conservative anti - Communist movement, British foreign policy and Latin American dictatorship are not democratic. By marking these groups, the IPA is trying to achieve specific goals such as promoting a democratic society based on freedom of expression and citizen's participation in the government, preventing the emergence of Nazism in the United States . The power of IPA arises from the criticism of the organizational propaganda advertisement that combines academia and practical progressiveism. It institutionalized the underworld tradition and uses this unique American criticism approach. I am dissatisfied with the Great Depression. 177
Mala Htun is an assistant professor in the political science of New College. Several articles and book chapters on Latin American abortion, divorce and family as well as gender politics and women's rights in Latin American dictatorship and democracy: she is the author of the country. She has a doctor's degree. A.B. Harvey's political science and the international relations of Stanford University Her current research focuses on gender and ethnic representative politics in Latin America and around the world. The opinion expressed here is the author's view and does not necessarily represent the official position of the Inter-American Development Bank. December 2003