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Recent Trends in the Business History of Latin America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2012

James P. Baughman
Affiliation:
Managing Editor

Extract

It would be folly to defend the conception “Latin America” too strongly. In a large area of twenty-odd republics, diverse in geography, resources, and ideologies, and where personalismo has been both a national and individual creed, generalizations tend to crumble when wielded too forcibly. Yet there are common ties of hemisphere, colonial heritage, language, law, and, to some extent, experience. The history of “Latin America” and its constituents is a recognized field of endeavor and will always sustain further study.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1965

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11 Also relevant to business conditions are the following IBRD reports: The Agricultural Development of Uruguay (Washington, 1951); The Agricultural Development of Chile (Washington, 1952); The Agricultural Development of Colombia (Washington, 1956); Electric Power Regulation in Latin America (Baltimore, 1959).

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48 See, e.g., Lauterbach, Albert, Man, Motives, and Money: Psychological Frontiers of Economics (2nd ed., Ithaca, 1959).Google Scholar

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54 Adapted from Wagley, Charles (ed.), Social Science Research on Latin America (New York, 1964), pp. 1929.Google Scholar For a recent sample of the response, see Flemion, Philip F. and MacLeod, Murdo J., Survey of Investigations in Progress in the Field of Latin American Studies (Washington, 1962).Google Scholar