Reviews
Few scholars are bold enough to try to explain 150 years of political development in five different countries, and even fewer succeed at such an ambitious undertaking. James Mahoney admirably pulls off such a feat in his masterful study of post independence political evolution in Central America... His work is to be commended not only as a seminal study of Central American politics, but also as a major contribution to scholarly understanding of critical junctures and path-dependent political development.
A clearly written and insightful monograph, sociologists interested in comparative history will find this a rewarding read... Legacies of Liberalism makes an important contribution to the literature on national development, Latin American political economy, and comparative historical theory.
[Mahoney's] comparative historical analysis of political development in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua makes a number of significant contributions. His systematic cross-case comparison is impressive in its breadth.
A provocative work of historical sociology... Mahoney's book is built around a bold thesis about nineteenth-century economic liberalism as the region's 'critical [historical] juncture.'
Mahoney presents a bold and multilayered argument that links developments across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, supported through a systematic comparative analysis of all five Central American countries. The Legacies of Liberalism is the most important book on Central America written in the last ten years, an ambitious and important work that will have a significant impact on debates in a number of fields.
Book Details
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Preface
Part I: Introduction
Chapter 1. Explaining Political Development in Central America
Chapter 2. The Liberal Reform Period and Its Legacies: A Conceptual Framework
P
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Preface
Part I: Introduction
Chapter 1. Explaining Political Development in Central America
Chapter 2. The Liberal Reform Period and Its Legacies: A Conceptual Framework
Part II: Antecedent Conditions
Chapter 3. Liberals and Conservatives Before the Reform Period
Chapter 4. Routes to Liberal Political Dominance
Part III: The Liberal Reform Period
Chapter 5. Radical Liberalism: Guatemala and El Salvador
Chapter 6. Reformist Liberalism: Costa Rica
Chapter 7. Aborted Liberalism: Honduras and Nicaragua
Part IV: Legacies of the Liberal Reform Period
Chapter 8. Aftermath: Reactions to the Liberal Reform
Chapter 9. Regime Heritage: Military Authoritarianism, Democracy, and Traditional Dictatorship
Chapter 10. Conclusion: Path Dependence and Political Change
Notes
Select Bibliography of Works on Central American Politics and History
Index