
Soldiers, civilians, and democracy : post-Franco Spain in comparative perspective
Title:
Soldiers, civilians, and democracy : post-Franco Spain in comparative perspective
Author:
Aguero, Felipe.
ISBN:
9780801850851
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995.
Physical Description:
xii, 316 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Contents:
1. Uncertainty, the Military, and Democratization -- 2. Asserting Civilian Supremacy in Postauthoritarian Regimes -- 3. Transition and Militarization: Initial Conditions in Comparative Perspective -- 4. Democratization as Surprise -- 5. Hard-line Failures, Reformist Alliances, and Military Modernization -- 6. Obstacles to Regime Consolidation after the Transition -- 7. The 1981 Coup Attempt and the End of the Military Threat to Democracy -- 8. Civilian Supremacy and Military Reform: Institutions for Control and Modernization -- 9. Outcomes Compared: Southern Europe and South America.
Abstract:
As one of the first countries to have successfully completed the transition from authoritarianism to stable democracy, Spain provides an excellent case study, with valuable lessons for many Latin American, southern European, and eastern European nations that are either making the transition from authoritarian to democratic rule or consolidating the transition in a stable regime.
Focusing on Spain after Franco's death, Felipe Aguero identifies the important factors, phases, and negotiating points that contributed to Spain's success, including the monarch's intervention as head and symbol of the Spanish state. Aguero also explains precisely what civilian feaders did to keep the military in check while the process of stabilization took place. He than sets Spain in the larger context of democratization in Latin America and southern Europe, thereby further refining transition theory. This is an important book for political scientists and for sociologists who study democratization and European and Latin American politics.
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