Colombia Territorial Rule
and the Llanos Frontier by Jane
M. Rausch Jane Rausch examines the efforts of four presidential administrations to establish effective rule over Colombias frontier territories between 1930 and 1946. She focuses on the impact of their policies and reforms on the region of the Llanos Orientales (tropical plains). Her close investigation of the ultimate failure of these initiatives helps explain both the intensity of the long civil war of 1948 to 1964 (known as the Violencia) and the continuation into the 1990s of the areas reputation as a seedbed for guerrilla activity and drug cartel operations. Rausch demonstrates that multiple frontiers have played a far greater role in the evolution of the country than has been previously understood. She focuses first on Amazonia and the Afro-Colombian region of Chocó as well as the Llanos; then she provides an in-depth history of the Llanos, a strategically important region gaining interest now because of its newly discovered oil fields as well as its intense guerrilla activity. Colombia will be of great interest to scholars of 20th-century Latin America and to those interested in the role of frontier management in nation-building. Jane M. Rausch is
professor of history at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, and the author of A Tropical Plains
Frontier: The Llanos of Colombia, 1531-1831 and The
Llanos Frontier in Colombian History, 1830-1930.
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"A path-breaking study in the field of comparative frontier analysis. Professor Rauschs study of Colombias several frontiers during 1930-46 aids in the understanding of serious problems besetting those regions today."James D. Henderson, Coastal Carolina University
Titles of Related Interest: The Ceramics of
Ráquira, Colombia, Colonization as Exploitation in the
Amazon Rain Forest, 1758-1911, Ethnic Conflict and International
Politics in the Middle East, Dictating Democracy, Fleeing Castro, |