Debating Cuban Exceptionalism

Debating Cuban Exceptionalism
Title Debating Cuban Exceptionalism PDF eBook
Author L. Whitehead
Publisher Springer
Pages 254
Release 2016-04-30
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1137123532

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This volume traces the developments in Cuba following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the subsequent definitive demise of state socialism. Topics covered include: the reasons for the persistence of 'the Cuban model,' and an examination of the interaction between elite and non-elite actors, as well as between domestic and international forces.

Debating Cuban Exceptionalism

Debating Cuban Exceptionalism
Title Debating Cuban Exceptionalism PDF eBook
Author L. Whitehead
Publisher
Pages
Release 2016
Genre
ISBN

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Chapter 7 The Cuban-American Political Machine: Reflections on Its Origins and Perpetuation -- Chapter 8 Rethinking Civil Society and Religion in Cuba -- Chapter 9 The Knots of Memory: Culture, Reconciliation, and Democracy in Cuba -- Conclusions: Cuban Exceptionalism Revisited -- Notes on Contributors -- Bibliography -- Index

Cuban Privilege

Cuban Privilege
Title Cuban Privilege PDF eBook
Author Susan Eva Eckstein
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 389
Release 2022-06-02
Genre History
ISBN 1108905064

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For over half a century the US granted Cubans, one of the largest immigrant groups in the country, unique entitlements. While other unauthorized immigrants faced detention, deportation, and no legal rights, Cuban immigrants were able to enter the country without authorization, and have access to welfare benefits and citizenship status. This book is the first to reveal the full range of entitlements granted to Cubans. Initially privileged to undermine the Castro-led revolution in the throes of the Cold War, one US President after another extended new entitlements, even in the post-Cold War era. Drawing on unseen archives, interviews, and survey data, Cuban Privilege highlights how Washington, in the process of privileging Cubans, transformed them from agents of US Cold War foreign policy into a politically powerful force influencing national policy. Comparing the exclusionary treatment of neighboring Haitians, the book discloses the racial and political biases embedded within US immigration policy.

Debating Cuban Exceptionalism

Debating Cuban Exceptionalism
Title Debating Cuban Exceptionalism PDF eBook
Author L. Whitehead
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Pages 239
Release 2014-01-14
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9781349738663

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This volume traces the developments in Cuba following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the subsequent definitive demise of state socialism. Topics covered include: the reasons for the persistence of 'the Cuban model,' and an examination of the interaction between elite and non-elite actors, as well as between domestic and international forces.

Exporting Revolution

Exporting Revolution
Title Exporting Revolution PDF eBook
Author Margaret Randall
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 273
Release 2017-03-30
Genre History
ISBN 0822372967

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In her new book, Exporting Revolution, Margaret Randall explores the Cuban Revolution's impact on the outside world, tracing Cuba's international outreach in health care, disaster relief, education, literature, art, liberation struggles, and sports. Randall combines personal observations and interviews with literary analysis and examinations of political trends in order to understand what compels a small, poor, and underdeveloped country to offer its resources and expertise. Why has the Cuban health care system trained thousands of foreign doctors, offered free services, and responded to health crises around the globe? What drives Cuba's international adult literacy programs? Why has Cuban poetry had an outsized influence in the Spanish-speaking world? This multifaceted internationalism, Randall finds, is not only one of the Revolution's most central features; it helped define Cuban society long before the Revolution.

India's Nuclear Debate

India's Nuclear Debate
Title India's Nuclear Debate PDF eBook
Author Priyanjali Malik
Publisher Routledge
Pages 355
Release 2014-03-21
Genre Political Science
ISBN 131780984X

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Making the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party’s nuclear tests in 1998 its starting point, this book examines how opinion amongst India’s ‘attentive’ public shifted from supporting nuclear abstinence to accepting — and even feeling a need for — a more assertive policy, by examining the complexities of the debate in India on nuclear policy in the 1990s. The study seeks to account for the shift in opinion by looking at the parallel processes of how nuclear policy became an important part of the public discourse in India, and what it came to symbolise for the country’s intelligentsia during this decade. It argues that the pressure on New Delhi in the early 1990s to fall in line with the non-proliferation regime, magnified by India’s declining global influence at the time, caused the issue to cease being one of defence, making it a focus of nationalist pride instead. The country’s nuclear programme thus emerged as a test of its ability to withstand external compulsions, guaranteeing not so much the sanctity of its borders as a certain political idea of it — that of a modern, scientific and, most importantly, ‘sovereign’ state able to defend its policies and set its goals.

Transnational Spanish Studies

Transnational Spanish Studies
Title Transnational Spanish Studies PDF eBook
Author Catherine Davies
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Pages 366
Release 2020-06-17
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 1789627281

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The focus of this book is two-fold. First it traces the expansive geographical spread of the language commonly referred to as Spanish. This has given rise to multiple hybrid formations over time emerging in the clash of multiple cultures, languages and religions within and between great empires (Roman, Islamic, Hispano-Catholic), each with expansionist policies leading to wars, huge territorial gains and population movements. This long history makes Hispanophone culture itself a supranational, trans-imperial one long before we witness its various national cultures being refashioned as a result of the transnational processes associated with globalization today. Indeed, the Spanish language we recognise today was ‘transnational’ long before it was ever the foundation of a single nation state. Secondly, it approaches the more recent post-national, translingual and inter-subjective ‘border-crossings’ that characterise the global world today with an eye to their unfolding within this long trans-imperial history of the Hispanophone world. In doing so, it maps out some of the contemporary post-colonial, decolonial and trans-Atlantic inflections of this trans-imperial history as manifest in literature, cinema, music and digital cultures. Contributors: Christopher J. Pountain, L.P. Harvey, James T. Monroe, Rosaleen Howard, Mark Thurner, Alexander Samson, Andrew Ginger, Samuel Llano, Philip Swanson, Claire Taylor, Emily Baker, Elzbieta Slodowska, Francisco-J. Hernández Adrián, Henriette Partzsch, Helen Melling, Conrad James and Benjamin Quarshie.