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Convincing the Colossus: Latin American Leaders Face the United States

thesis
posted on 2025-04-07, 18:51 authored by Tom Long

In recent years, analysts have argued that the United States' influence in Latin America is waning; others add that Washington is being replaced by actors from the region and beyond. However, even when Washington was at the height of its power, Latin American leaders were influential in shaping hemispheric relations, sometimes centrally--albeit in ways that have seldom been recognized. This dissertation examines Latin American foreign policy vis-à-vis the United States, asking whether and how Latin American leaders are able to influence U.S. policies that affect their interests. Building on the IR literature on small or weak states, it argues that weaker-state leaders are indeed able to exercise substantial influence in international relations, but they do so differently than great powers. Instead of employing traditional power capabilities, they must rely on a combination of opportunities, allies, and ideas. The dissertation employs multinational archival research and interviews to analyze U.S.-Latin American relations in four historical case studies--Brazil's Operação Pan-Americana in the late 1950s, the negotiation of the Panama Canal Treaties in the 1970s, the emergence of the North American Free Trade Agreement in the early 1990s, and the creation of Plan Colombia in 1998-2000--to examine how Latin American leaders define and pursue their interests when facing the world's most powerful country.

History

Publisher

ProQuest

Language

English

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/15105

Committee chair

Robert A. Pastor

Committee member(s)

Max Paul Friedman; Boaz Atzili

Degree discipline

International Relations

Degree grantor

American University. School of International Service

Degree level

  • Doctoral

Degree name

Ph.D. in International Relations, American University, 2013

Local identifier

thesesdissertations_151_Long_american_0008E_10463_OBJ.pdf

Media type

application/pdf

Pagination

436 pages

Access statement

Electronic thesis is restricted to authorized American University users only, per author's request.

Call number

Thesis 9986

MMS ID

99144951643604102

Submission ID

10463

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