Building a global southern coalition: the competing approaches of Brazil's Lula and Venezuela's Chávez

This paper will set out the two very different regional leadership strategies being pursued by Brazil and Venezuela, concluding that it is the Brazilian neo-structuralist vision that will have more success than the Venezuelan overseas development aid approach. The two different approaches to Latin A...

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Veröffentlicht in:Third world quarterly 2007-10, Vol.28 (7), p.1343-1358
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description This paper will set out the two very different regional leadership strategies being pursued by Brazil and Venezuela, concluding that it is the Brazilian neo-structuralist vision that will have more success than the Venezuelan overseas development aid approach. The two different approaches to Latin American leadership point to a substantive difference in how the regional system should operate in geopolitical and geo-economic terms, with the Brazilians favouring a market-oriented system in opposition to Venezuela's statist option. Contestation for regional leadership as set out in the article emerges as an early indicator of a chilling of relations between Brazil and Venezuela and points to a future scenario where other regional states may be able to play off contending would-be leaders.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; Political Science Complete
subjects Ambition
Bilateralism
Brazil
Chavez, Hugo
Coalition Formation
Coalitions
Competition
Countries
Developing Countries
Development aid
Development economics
Development strategies
Economic liberalism
Foreign aid
Globalization
Government officials
International development
International relations
Latin America
LDCs
Leadership
Lula da Silva, Luiz Inacio
North and South
Oil prices
Political behavior
Political economy
Political Power
Presidents
Regionalism
Venezuela
title Building a global southern coalition: the competing approaches of Brazil's Lula and Venezuela's Chávez
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