This book explores how the Cold War Latin American right sought to rescue the essence of Europe's fascist ideology after 1945 by reformulating it into novel authoritarian state models. It will interest students and scholars of Latin American history, political science, economics, sociology, and anthropology.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction: turning fascism into authoritarian technocracy; 1. In defense of 'Hispanidad: confirming the mythological foundations for Hispanic technocracy (1945-1959); 2. Technocratic Spain: the opus dei and the making of the 'second Francoist era' (1957-1969); 3. Juan Carlos Onganí a's 'Argentine Revolution': Hispanic technocracy to surpass post-fascist populism (1956-1970); 4. Augusto Pinochet dictatorship: Chile's neoliberal variant of Hispanic technocracy (1964-1977); 5. Democracies of the third wave: Hispanic technocracy's decline as a state model (1973-1988); Conclusion: towards a theory of Hispanic technocracy; Notes; Works Consulted; Index.