Spain and Central America: Democracy and Foreign PolicyThis theoretical and empirical study is the first to examine the connection between the image and substance of Spain's democracy and the country's foreign policy in Central America. Rosenberg establishes a linkage between Spain's political model of democratic transition and Spanish foreign policy on the isthmus, while questioning the validity of the model as a foreign policy instrument. This well-documented case study is intended for political scientists and historians, students, scholars, and policymakers dealing with the complex and difficult relationships between Spain, Europe, and Central America and with major questions about the future of democracy. |
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... million in aid to the pro - U.S . Chamorro government in Nica- ragua , followed by a July 1991 package of $ 75 million which included the $ 15 million withheld from the Sandinistas when they took power in 1979 , was certainly not lost ...
... million ECUs ( approximately $ 790 million at the inflated 1990 exchange rates ) . ' Bilateral aid from the seven EEC members of the OECD Development Aid Committee , which in the 1986-87 period gave a total of $ 359 million to Central ...
... million and development aid of about $ 90 million to the seven countries ( Venezuela , Cuba , Cape Verde , Santo Tomé , Panamá , Dominican Republic , and Algeria ) that took in etarras . The Spanish government , however , denies any ...
Contents
Democratic Models | 3 |
The Spanish Democratic | 23 |
Packaging the Model | 34 |
Copyright | |
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