Lessons of the Venezuelan Experience
etc editor Joseph S Tulchin editor Johanna Mendelson Forman editor Louis W Goodman editor Moises Naim editor Gary Bland editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Wilson Centre Press,U.S.
Published:1st Feb '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Until two attempts at military coups in 1992, Venezuela enjoyed political stability that was exceptional for a Latin American nation under a succession, going back to 1958, of constitutionally chosen presidents. Venezuela had leaders who were socially responsible and progressive, funding social programmes with money the state earned from petroleum exports. What had weakened the foundations of that stability by the 1990s? In this book a group of scholars reviews Venezuelan exceptionalism and the key institutions that had atrophied economically, socially, and politically. The authors draw lessons on the need for public accountability in a democracy in the light of these specific failures of the government and other institutions in Venezuela. They examine the major political players - political parties, popular opinion, the military; sectors of the economy; state, populism, corruption, and crisis; and Venezuela's foreign relations.
This excellent collection of essays is the latest in what may be a welcome growth of interest in the country... It contains analysis of all the salient dimensions of what is beginning to look like a structural crisis for Venezuela. Journal of Latin American Studies Perspectives on the specific issues surrounding the failed consolidation of democratic government in Venezuela... [including] reforming agriculture; legitimacy, governability, and reform in Venezuela; the 'Big Bang' approach to macroeconomic balance; [and] the question of inefficiency and inequality. Journal of Economic Literature
ISBN: 9780943875668
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 567g
576 pages