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Social Security and Health Policies in Latin America: The Changing Roles of the State and the Private Sector
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2022
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- Copyright © 1993 by the University of Texas Press
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Notes
1. For an overall analysis, see Carmelo Mesa-Lago, Social Security in Latin America: Pressure Groups, Stratification, and Inequality (Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1976).
2. Ibid.; and James M. Malloy, The Politics of Social Security in Brazil (Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1978).
3. Leon Duguit, Law in the Modern State (New York: B. W. Heubsch, 1919), p. xx.
4. Mesa-Lago, Social Security in Latin America, 284.
5. Malloy, Politics of Social Security in Brazil, 132.
6. Eduardo Frei, Mensaje presidencial, 21 May 1965.
7. Silvia Borzutzky, “The Chicago Boys, Social Security, and Welfare in Chile,” in The Radical Right and the Welfare State: An International Assessment, edited by Howard Glennerster and James Midgley (Hertfordshire, Engl.: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991), 79–99.
8. José Piñera, speech presented to the Seminario sobre Reforma Previsional y Evaluación del Plan Laboral, Santiago, 29 June 1980.
9. Borzutzky, “The Chicago Boys,” 95.
10. Special section, “Social Security in Latin America,” in Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: 1991 Report (Washington, D.C.: Inter-American Development Bank, 1991).
11. Economic and Social Progress in Latin America: 1990 Report (Washington, D.C.: Inter-American Development Bank, 1990), 26–29.
12. Ibid., 27.
13. James M. Malloy, “Statecraft, Social Policy, and Governance,” in The State and Public Policy, edited by James F. Hollifield and Guy Peters (Boulder, Colo.: Westview, forthcoming).
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