"[The twelve chapters] go well beyond the issue, draw visions about the protection and future repartition of natural resources and they offer idealistic strategies for a new hemispheric policy . . .Those who are looking for alterantive perspectives and recommendations of resistance against U.S. American economic and political strategies as well as the consequences of globalization will find the volume helpful and inspiring." - Iberoamericana
"A unique, valuable contribution to the literature on U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America and inter-American relations." - Pedro Monreal, Senior Research Associate, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil
"This important book deals with various aspects of the Bush administration's unhappy efforts to deal with myriad problems in Latin America. Examining the 'aggressive unilateralism' of the current administration's policy, the authors analyze Bush's stance of preventive war, unfounded military attacks, and the U.S.'s disregard of its traditional allies and international law in its attempts of 'military and political dominance over the world.' No wonder that U.S. policies are increasingly rejected in Latin America and that the image of the U.S., under Bush, has reached an all-time low." - Wayne S. Smith, Senior Fellow, Center for International Policy, Washington, D.C."The volume belongs in all college and university libraries with significant holdings in Latin American affairs... Recommended." - CHOICE
Introduction; G.Prevost & C.O.Campos The United States, Latin America, and the Caribbean: From NeoPanamericanism to the 'American System' of the 21st Century; C.O.Campos The Free Trade Area of the Americas in the Latin American Agenda of United States Foreign Policy; L.F.Ayerbe The Axis of Misunderstanding: The Bush Administration, Intelligence Agencies, and Hemispheric Security after 11 September 2001; P.E.Olsen Free Trade Agreements: Key Pieces in the Accumulation of Transnational Capital; R.Moreno Drinking Water, the New Strategic Resource of the 21st Century: The Special Case of the Guarani Aquifer; E.Bruzzone Plan Colombia and Its Implications for the Andean Region; G.Rodas Amazonia, MERCOSUR and the Possibilities for Integration; E.Amayo Integration and the Environment in Latin America; A.Elizalde Confronting the Hegemon and its Latin American Agents: Latin American Social Movements and Progressive Governments in the New Century; G.Prevost
GARY PREVOST is Professor of Political Science at Saint John's University and College of Saint Benedict in Collegeville, Minnesota, USA.
CARLOS OLIVA CAMPOS is Professor of History, University of Havana, Cuba.