Political Culture and Institutional Development in Costa Rica and Nicaragua
Democracy's checkered past and uncertain future in the developing world still puzzles and fascinates. In Latin America, attempts to construct resilient democracies have been as pervasive as reversals have been cruel. This book is based on a wealth of original historical documents and contemporary interviews with prominent political actors and analyses five centuries of political history in these paradigmatic cases of outstanding democratic success and abysmal failure. It shows that while factors highlighted by standard explanations matter, it is political culture that configures economic development, institutional choices and political pacts in ways that directly affect both democracy's chances and its quality. But it also claims that political culture is a dynamic combination of rational and normative imperatives that define actors' views of the permissible, shape their sense of realism, structure political struggles and legitimate the resulting distribution of power.
Acknowledgements Abbreviations Maps PART 1: INTRODUCTION An Institutional Approach to the Church Historical Models of the Church Structure of the Book PART 2: THE CATHOLIC HIERARCHY IN NICARAGUA:...
Argument on the Question of the Validity of the Treaty of Limits Between Costa Rica and Nicaragua - and Other Supplementary Points Connected With It is an unchanged, high-quality reprint of the...