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- Title
ATTENTION DEFICITS. Why Politicians Ignore Defense Policy in Latin America.
- Authors
Pion-Berlin, David; Trinkunas, Harold
- Abstract
Interest in defense issues among Latin American politicians has faded with the advent of widespread democratization in the region and the retreat of the armed forces to their barracks. Defense policy is rarely subject to the same level of public scrutiny and debate as other major policy issues faced by the region, such as health, education, and public safety. This is puzzling because by ignoring defense policy, civilian leaders in the region risk ceding authority to their militaries, allowing them a degree of self-management and undermining the consolidation of democratic civilian control of the armed forces. This article explains civilian politicians" inattention to defense as a function of three factors: a historical path that has produced armed forces with limited capabilities that are more often a threat to their own governments than their neighbors; a relatively benign international threat environment in Latin America that makes neglect of defense policy a low risk proposition; and the low importance that voters assign to the provision of the national defense as either a public or a private good. Under these circumstances, it is rational for most civilian politicians to ignore defense policy and focus their attention instead on coup avoidance.
- Subjects
LATIN America; MILITARY policy; DEMOCRACY; LATIN American politics &; government; ARMED Forces; MILITARY readiness; POLITICIANS
- Publication
Latin American Research Review, 2007, Vol 42, Issue 3, p76
- ISSN
0023-8791
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/lar.2007.0031