dc.creatorGonzalez-Levaggi, Ariel
dc.creatorVentura Barreiro, Vicente
dc.date2022-10-13T14:18:59Z
dc.date2022-10-13T14:18:59Z
dc.date2021
dc.date.accessioned2023-08-30T15:35:26Z
dc.date.available2023-08-30T15:35:26Z
dc.identifierGonzalez-Levaggi, A., Ventura Barreiro, V. Eurasia rising: COVID-19 in Latin America [en línea]. Prism. 2021, 9 (4). Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/15206
dc.identifier2157- 0663
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/15206
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/8525408
dc.descriptionL atin America is slowly becoming a venue for the United States’ strategic competition with Russia and China. Despite the regional illusions during the early 21st century, the Brazilian leadership of Latin America has disappeared, regional integration has lost its climax and external state actors have increasing geoeconomic interests throughout the Western Hemisphere from the Rio Grande to Antarctica. To complicate matters further, COVID-19 has impacted Latin America more deeply than other regions, thus expanding the range of health, economic, and security needs in the continent. China and Russia have appeared as alternative providers of medical equipment, humanitarian aid, and vaccines, thus trying to replace the traditional role of Western developed nations, especially the United States, on the continent. COVID-19 is aggravating the structural economic and social burdens on Latin American countries. Higher unemployment and the increase in poverty may lead to turbulent political times and have serious implications for regional security. Do poverty, violence and corruption open the door for extra-regional great powers in Latin America? If former U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) Commander Admiral Craig Faller is right,1 Latin America will fail to follow an “active non-alignment”2 and will be increasingly caught between hard external choices and facing a wide range of domestic emergencies. Venezuela is a leading case. As populists’ failed reforms and Maduro’s authoritarian path, even the Caracas’ golden apple—its oil industry—imploded, while China and Russia rushed not only to support their distant partner, but also to collect debts. Valuable commodities are being exchanged for debt and the Venezuelan people have become poorer and hopeless. More than five million have decided to leave the country and Maduro’s Venezuela has become both a pariah state in Latin America and an attractive spot for non-regional great powers’ projection. This article provides an analysis of the multidimensional interaction among local, regional and geo-political impacts of COVID-19, paying specific attention to the Argentine case and the increasing role of China and Russia in the Western Hemisphere...
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherNational Defense University Press
dc.rightsAcceso abierto
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
dc.sourcePrism. 2021 Vol.9, No.4, 2021
dc.subjectCOVID 19
dc.subjectGEOPOLITICA
dc.subjectRELACIONES INTERNACIONALES
dc.subjectCOOPERACION INTERNACIONAL
dc.titleEurasia rising: COVID-19 in Latin America
dc.typeArtículo
dc.coverageAmérica Latina
dc.coverageChina
dc.coverageRusia
dc.coverageArgentina
dc.coverageEstados Unidos


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