- Princeton University Press
Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America
Key Metrics
- Lars Schoultz
- Princeton University Press
- Paperback
- 9780691614823
- 10 X 7.01 X 0.9 inches
- 1.68 pounds
- Political Science > International Relations - General
- English
Book Description
The role of human rights in United States policy toward Latin America is the subject of this study. It covers the early sixties to 1980, a period when humanitarian values came to play an important role in determining United States foreign policy. The author is concerned both with explaining why these values came to impinge on government decision making and how internal bureaucratic processes affected the specific content of United States policy.
Originally published in 1981.
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Author Bio
Lars Schoultz, William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor Emeritus of Political Science, received his B.A. and M.A. from Stanford University and his Ph.D. from UNC. His area of special interest is inter-American relations. He has held a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship in Buenos Aires to study Argentine electoral behavior, two postdoctoral research grants from the Social Science Research Council to study United States policy toward Latin America, and a Ford Foundation grant to study U.S. immigration policy.
He has been a MacArthur Fellow in International Peace and Security and held residential fellowships at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and at the National Humanities Center. Schoultz is the recipient of the Tanner Award (1982), the Class of 1994 Award (1994), and the William Friday Award(2006), all for teaching excellence, and he is a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece and the Order of the Grail/Valkyries, both student honoraries.
He is the author of Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America ( Princeton, 1981), The Populist Challenge:Argentine Electoral Behavior in the Postwar Era (UNC, 1983), National Security and United States Policy Toward Latin America (Princeton, 1987), Beneath the United States: A History of U.S. Policy Toward Latin America (Harvard, 1998), That Infernal Little Cuban Republic: The United States and the Cuban Revolution (UNC, 2009), and In Their Own Best Interests: A History of the U.S. Effort to Improve Latin Americans (Harvard, 2018). His single-authored articles have appeared in The American Political Science Review,
The American Journal of Political Science, Comparative Politics, International Organization, The Journal of Politics, The Journal of Latin American Studies, The Latin American Research Review, and Political Science Quarterly. He is a past president of the Latin American Studies Association, which in 2019 honored him with the Kalman Silvert Award.
Source: Department of Political Science at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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