Chile: the making of a republic 1830-1865. Politics and ideas
Material type:
TextLanguage: English Publication details: New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003Description: 271 pISBN: - 9780521826105
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PART I THE NEW REPUBLIC, 1830–1865
1 The Early Republic: A Sketch 03
2 The Conservative System 22
PART II FROM PORTALES TO MONTT, 1835–1851
3 Authoritarians and Moderates, 1835–1846 47
4 The Liberal Challenge, 1846–1851 76
PART III MID-CENTURY ATTITUDES
5 Progress and Its Instruments 105
6 Political Argument 122
7 Model Republic 145
8 Looking Outward 167
PART IV ORDER AND LIBERTY, 1851–1864
9 The Conservative Defection, 1851–1858 191
10 The Triumph of Liberty, 1859–1864 223
Sources 253
Index 263
Simon Collier examines the formative period of the Chilean republic's history. He combines an analysis of the ideas and assumptions of the Chilean political class with a narrative of the political process from the consolidation of the Conservative regime in the 1830s, to the beginning of the liberalization in the early 1860s. Chile's stable and increasingly liberal political tradition was forged in serious and occasionally violent conflicts between the dominant Conservative Party (which governed in an often authoritarian manner from 1830 to 1858) and the growing forces of political Liberalism. A major political realignment in 1857-8 paved the way for comprehensive liberalization.
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