Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion
Since the end of World War II, the United States has come to dominate the world economically and politically, leading many to describe the United States as an empire. Scholars have analyzed how the US government has worked through international financial institutions, its Central Intelligence Agency, and outright warfare to achieve its will. In this book, Timothy M. Gill spotlights how the US government also worked through democracy promotion to undermine governments abroad, including in Venezuela. President Hugo Chávez, who ruled from 1999 until his death in 2013, was among the democratically elected Latin American state leaders who embraced socialism and challenged the idea of US global power. Gill shows how US government agencies funded and trained opposition parties and activists, and how such intervention often was justified in neocolonial and racist terms. Through analysis of documents obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, embassy cables, and interviews with US government and Venezuelan nonprofit members, Gill details such operations and the imperial thinking behind them.
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Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion
Since the end of World War II, the United States has come to dominate the world economically and politically, leading many to describe the United States as an empire. Scholars have analyzed how the US government has worked through international financial institutions, its Central Intelligence Agency, and outright warfare to achieve its will. In this book, Timothy M. Gill spotlights how the US government also worked through democracy promotion to undermine governments abroad, including in Venezuela. President Hugo Chávez, who ruled from 1999 until his death in 2013, was among the democratically elected Latin American state leaders who embraced socialism and challenged the idea of US global power. Gill shows how US government agencies funded and trained opposition parties and activists, and how such intervention often was justified in neocolonial and racist terms. Through analysis of documents obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, embassy cables, and interviews with US government and Venezuelan nonprofit members, Gill details such operations and the imperial thinking behind them.
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Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion

Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion

by Timothy M. Gill
Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion

Encountering U.S. Empire in Socialist Venezuela: The Legacy of Race, Neo-Colonialism, and Democracy Promotion

by Timothy M. Gill

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Overview

Since the end of World War II, the United States has come to dominate the world economically and politically, leading many to describe the United States as an empire. Scholars have analyzed how the US government has worked through international financial institutions, its Central Intelligence Agency, and outright warfare to achieve its will. In this book, Timothy M. Gill spotlights how the US government also worked through democracy promotion to undermine governments abroad, including in Venezuela. President Hugo Chávez, who ruled from 1999 until his death in 2013, was among the democratically elected Latin American state leaders who embraced socialism and challenged the idea of US global power. Gill shows how US government agencies funded and trained opposition parties and activists, and how such intervention often was justified in neocolonial and racist terms. Through analysis of documents obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, embassy cables, and interviews with US government and Venezuelan nonprofit members, Gill details such operations and the imperial thinking behind them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822989165
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 11/15/2022
Series: Pitt Latin American Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Timothy M. Gill is assistant professor of sociology in the Department of Sociology at the University of Tennessee–Knoxville.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction. US Empire in the Twenty-First Century 1. The Rise of Hugo Chávez and the Evolution of US-Venezuelan Relations 2. Theoretical Perspectives on US Democracy Assistance 3. Understanding Venezuelans, Understanding Chávez: The Endurance of Racist-Imperialist Mentalities 4. Coaching Opposition Political Parties I: The International Republican Institute 5. Coaching Opposition Political Parties II: The National Democratic Institute 6. Promoting Free Market Economics and Traditional Labor Unions in Chávez’s Venezuela 7. Funding Anti-Chávez Voices in Civil Society: The National Endowment for Democracy 8. Transforming Chavistas, Encouraging Protest: The US Agency for International Development in Venezuela 9. Chávez Responds: Terminating Foreign Funding for Political Parties and NGOs Conclusion. Making Theoretical Sense of US Democracy Assistance Efforts in Venezuela Notes Bibliography Index
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