Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T17:22:20.960Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An Approach to the Study of the Latin American Military

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Thomas I. Dickson Jr.*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama

Extract

Political scientists today are deeply engaged in the search for better ways to study the phenomena within their purview and for more insightful characterizations of political processes. Examination of the politically active military in developing countries has not escaped the trend. Yet this remains a segment of the discipline where impressionism and conjecture still are much in vogue. Indeed, the state of the art of analysis of the military role in less-developed areas is discouraging to some (Nordlinger, 1970). Even without taking a glum view, however, there is ample room to hold that more precise and structured studies of the politicomilitary phenomenon are much needed. The approach to the study of the Latin American military suggested here, which has possible applications to other geographic sectors of the underdeveloped world, is not intended to substitute for, but rather to complement forms of analysis that customarily have been followed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1972

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alexander, R. J. (1969) An Introduction to Argentina. New York: Frederick A. Praeger.Google Scholar
Almond, G. A. (1969) “Political development: analytical and normative perspectives.” Comparative Pol. Studies 1 (January): 447470.Google Scholar
Almond, G. A. and Powell, G. B. Jr., (1966) Comparative Politics: A Developmental Approach. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Anderson, C. W. (1967) Politics and Economic Change in Latin America. Princeton: D. Van Nostrand.Google Scholar
Astiz, C. A. (1969) Power Groups and Power Elites in Peruvian Politics. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Bourricaud, F. (1970) “Los militares: ¿por que ‘y paraque?’ ” Aportes 16 (Aprü): 1455.Google Scholar
Brill, W. H. (1967) Military Intervention in Bolivia: The Overthrow of Paz Estenssoro and the MNR. Washington, D.C.: Institute for the Comparative Study of Political Systems.Google Scholar
Clark, P. Jr., (1971) “Military government in Peru, 1968-1971.” South Eastern Latin Americanist 14 (March): 15.Google Scholar
Clinton, R. L. (1971) “The modernizing military: the case of Peru.” Inter-Amer. Economic Affairs 24 (Spring): 4366.Google Scholar
Cohen, A. (1971) “Bolivia: internal instability and international dependence.” Current History 60 (February): 7883.Google Scholar
Cohen, A. (1967) “Revolution in Argentina?” Current History 53 (November): 282290.Google Scholar
Cotler, J. (1971) Political Crisis and Military PopuUsm in Peru. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Craig, A. (1967) “Argentina: the latest revolution.” World Today 23 (May): 206215.Google Scholar
Einaudi, L. R. (1969) The Peruvian Military: A Summary Political Analysis. Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND.Google Scholar
Estep, R. (1970) The Role of the Military in Peruvian Politics. Montogomery, Ala.: Maxwell AFB Aerospace Studies Institute.Google Scholar
Evans, R. D. (1968) “Brazilian revolution of 1964: political surgery without anaesthetics.” International Affairs 44 (April): 266281.Google Scholar
Goldwert, M. (1966) “Dichotomies of militarism in Argentina.” Orbis 10 (Fall): 930939.Google Scholar
Graham, R. (1967) “Brazil's dilemma.” Current History 53 (November): 291297, 308.Google Scholar
Grayson, G. W. Jr., (1971) “Peru's military populism.” Current History 60 (February): 7177, 116.Google Scholar
Grayson, G. W. Jr., (1970) “Peru's military government.” Current History 58 (February): 6572.Google Scholar
Groth, A. J. (1971) Comparative Politics: A Distributive Approach. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Jordan, D. C. (1970) “Argentina's new military government.” Current History 58 (February): 8590, 116-117.Google Scholar
Lee, M. (1969) “Argentine political instability.” J. of Inter-American Studies 11 (October): 558570.Google Scholar
Lenczowski, G. (1966) “The objects and methods of Nasserism,” pp. 197211 in J. H. Thompson and R. D. Reischauer, Modernization of the Arabic World. Princeton: D. Van Nostrand.Google Scholar
Luckham, R. (1971) The Nigerian Military: A Sociological Analysis of Authority and Revolt, 1960-67. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge Univ. Press.Google Scholar
McAlister, L. N. (1966) “Recent research and writing on the role of the military in Latin America.” Latin Amer. Research Rev. 2 (Fall): 536.Google Scholar
McAlister, L. N. (1965) “Changing the concepts of the role of the military in Latin America.” Annals of Amer. Academy of Pol. and Social Sci. 360 (July): 8598.Google Scholar
Marr, P. A. (1970) “The Iraqi revolution: a case study of army rule.” Orbis 14 (Fall): 714739.Google Scholar
Merritt, R. L. (1970) Systematic Approaches to Comparative Politics. Chicago: RAND McNally.Google Scholar
Needler, M. C. (1969) “The Latin American military: predatory reactionaries or modenizing patriots.” J. of Inter-American Studies 11 (April): 237244.Google Scholar
Needler, M. C. (1966) “Political development and military intervention in Latin America.” Amer. Pol. Sci. Rev. 60 (September): 616626.Google Scholar
Nordlinger, E. A. (1970) “Soldiers in mufti: the impact of military rule upon economic and social change in the non-Westem states.” Amer. Pol. Sci. Rev. 64 (December): 11311148.Google Scholar
Nun, J. (1968) “A Latin American phenomenon: the middle-class military coup,” pp. 145187 in J. Petras and M. Zeitlin (eds.) Latin America: Reform or Revolution. New York: Fawcett.Google Scholar
Paige, G. D. (1968) The Korean Decision. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Peretz, D. (1959) “In search of a doctrine: a study of the ideology of the Egyptian revolution.” Middle East Forum 35, 1317, 33.Google Scholar
Poppino, R. E. (1971) “Brazil's third government of the revolution.” Current History (February): 102107, 115.Google Scholar
Price, R. M. (1971) “A theoretical approach to military rule in new states: reference-group theory and the Ghanaian case.” World Politics 23 (April): 399430.Google Scholar
Pye, L. W. [ed.] (1970) Case Studies in Comparative Politics-Asia. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Robinson, J. A. (1968) “Decision-making: political aspects,” p. 60 in Volume 4 of International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. New York: Macmillan and Free Press.Google Scholar
Roett, R. (1970) “A praetorian army in politics: the Brazilian military, 1946 to the present.” Presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, November.Google Scholar
Ropp, S. C. (1970) “The military and urbanization in Latin America: some implications of trends in recruitment.” Inter-Amer. Economic Affairs 24 (Autumn): 2736.Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, H. J. (1970) “Brazil's military regime.” Current History 58 (February): 7378, 115-116.Google Scholar
Schneider, R. M. (1971) The Political System of Brazil: Emergence of a “Modernizing” Authoritarian Regime, 1964-1970. New York: Columbia Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Sloan, J. W. (1971) “Three views of Latin America: President Nixon, Governor Rockefeller, and the Latin American consensus of Vina del Mar.” Orbis 14 (Winter): 941.Google Scholar
Stern, R. W. (1970) The Process of Opposition in India: Two Case Studies of How Policy Shapes Politics. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Taylor, C. L. (1970) “Turmoil, economic development and organized political opposition as predictors in irregular government change.” Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Los Angeles, September.Google Scholar
Thompson, J. (1970) “Argentine economic policy under the Ongania regime.” Inter-Amer. Economic Affairs 24 (Summer): 5171.Google Scholar
Tuthill, J. W. (1969) “Economic and political aspects of development in Brazil and U.S. aid.” J. of Inter-American Studies 11 (April): 186208.Google Scholar
Yglesias, J. (1969) “Report from Peru: the reformers in brass hats.” New York Times Magazine (December 14): 58-59.Google Scholar