• Episode 27: Latin America During the Cold War

  • Feb 14 2025
  • Length: 14 mins
  • Podcast

Episode 27: Latin America During the Cold War

  • Summary

  • In this episode we will look at the impact that US imperialism and the Cold War had on Latin America, focusing especially on the short and long-term effects of US interventionist foreign policy in the region.

    • Despite the fact that most of Latin America had been independent of colonial rule since the early 19th century, why did it still see much of the same anti-western Marxist agitation that would characterize post-colonial Africa and Asia in the years after WWII?
    • Why was Marxism a potentially disastrous political model to follow in the years after WWII? Was there anything inherently volatile about Marxism or were there external factors at play?
    • How can the example of the United Fruit Company be used to explain much of the political volatility in Latin America, especially since WWII?
    • How was Cuba’s post-revolution economy sustainable?
    • Why did Latin American military officers see themselves as necessary alternatives to the political status quo?
    • Why did the end of the Cold War foster some movements towards democracy throughout Latin America?
    • What was a “banana republic”, and what does it have to do with the United States?
    • In what ways is the movement of peoples north from Latin America a legacy of 19th century and Cold War US foreign and economic policy?


    00:00:00 Chapter 27 Question 1

    00:01:40 Chapter 27 Question 2

    00:02:50 Question 3

    00:07:10 Question 4

    00:08:14 Question 5

    00:09:47 Question 6

    00:11:04 Question 7

    00:11:53 Question 8


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