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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A comprehensive, 17 page examination of socio-political trends in Latin America leading to Democracy. The writer looks at how the continent has finally begun to develop a positive image of the U.S., the significance of NAFTA as a partnership between the U.S. & Mexico, The Miami Summit of the Americas, and much more. The positive influences of several key Latin-American politicians and leaders are examined as well. Bibliography lists 12+ sources.
Page Count:
17 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Latinde.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Despite the butchery and suffering in Somalia, Bosnia Herzegovina, Haiti and other trouble spots during the early 1990s, this decade will go down as a year of substantial human-rights progress
and a semi-global movement towards democracy. Even as early as 1992, we closed the book on the year with new hope for peace in Somalia, as the U.S. military
had intervened on behalf of humanitarian goals in an African nation for the first time. Other African states, including Benin, Cape Verde, Namibia, Mauritius, Zambia, Gabon, Nigeria, Mozambique and Cameroon
made significant progress toward democracy while the world watched. Just three short years ago, the newly independent states of Eastern Europe accelerated their journey to
democracy and demilitarization. In Germany, growing support for neo-fascist groups had been countered by massive peaceful demonstrations against them. But overlooked by many has
been the outstanding democratic trends of Latin America. As our neighbor, the governments and relevant actions of the many countries comprising that which is formally termed Latin America, have
long been of great concern to us. Now, at the conclusion of the twentieth century, years of inherent sociopolitical differences are finally coming to a close as most Lain
American countries move towards democracy. I. Latin America Has Acquired a Positive Image of the U.S. In one article that I reviewed, a
man named Cesar Miranda had spent the past two days saying goodbye to family and friends in his small village outside this capital city. He was on his way to
el Norte, as Salvadorans refer to the United States. Miranda was paying a contact $2,000 to help smuggle him into Mexico and on into the United States where his
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