Artículos de revistas
On the wrong side of history - Israel, Latin America and the United States under a peripheral-realist perspective, 1949-2012
Fecha
2013-08Registro en:
Escudé, Carlos Andrés; On the wrong side of history - Israel, Latin America and the United States under a peripheral-realist perspective, 1949-2012; The Hebrew University Magnes Press; Judaica Latinoamericana; VII; 8-2013; 418-464
0793-8373
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Escudé, Carlos Andrés
Resumen
This paper applies peripheral realist theory to the case of the long-term interstate relations between Israel and the Latin American countries. It attempts to understand the change in these relations, which began with full-fledged Latin American support for the establishment of the State of Israel, but deteriorated following the establishment of the US-Israeli alliance. It interprets the US-Israeli-Latin American triangle as a nonWaltzian hierarchical interstate structure, and suggests that the involution in IsraeliLatin American relations can largely be explained in terms of at least five intervening variables: Israel’s vulnerability; its special relationship between the United States and Israel after 1967; the establishment of full electoral democracies in Latin America after 1983; the region’s social structures, and class identity of the Latin American Jewry.