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・ Latin American Integration Association
・ Latin American International Financial Exchange
・ Latin American involvement in international peacekeeping
・ Latin American Literary Review Press
・ Latin American literature
・ Latin American migration to the United Kingdom
・ Latin American Miracles
・ Latin American Music Award
・ Latin American Music Awards of 2015
・ Latin American music in the United States
・ Latin American Musicians Association
・ Latin American Muslims
・ Latin American Network Information Center
・ Latin American Newspaper Association
・ Latin American Parliament
Latin American Perspectives
・ Latin American poetry
・ Latin American Poker Tour
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 1 results
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 2 results
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 3 results
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 4 results
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 5 results
・ Latin American Poker Tour season 6 results
・ Latin American Policy
・ Latin American Public Opinion Project
・ Latin American revolutions
・ Latin American School of Medicine
・ Latin American Section
・ Latin American social archaeology


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Latin American Perspectives : ウィキペディア英語版
Latin American Perspectives

''Latin American Perspectives, A Journal on Capitalism and Socialism'', is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes papers in the field of Latin American studies. It was established in 1974 and is currently published by SAGE Publications. The managing editor is Ronald Chilcote, Edward A. Dickson Emeritus Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Riverside. LAP is the #1 journal in the Latin American Studies category of Google Scholar Metrics.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=en&vq=hum_latinamericanstudies )
== History ==
''Latin American Perspectives'' emerged from the political and intellectual ferment of the late 1960s and early 1970s, notably the civil rights and anti-war movements that raised concerns about social justice and questioned the rationale and goals of U.S. foreign policy. Young academics, influenced by the work of radical scholars like C. Wright Mills and Paul Baran, critical of U.S. intervention in Latin America, and supportive of movements for social change, particularly the Cuban Revolution, formed the Union of Radical Latin Americanists (URLA) under the direction of Chilcote and Joel Edelstein within the Latin American Studies Association (LASA). Their objectives included opening up the field to methodological approaches including Marxism and to cutting edge work by Latin American theorists and scholars. They urged LASA to create a new journal that would reflect these concerns, and the LASA membership approved a resolution in support. Chilcote was invited by LASA to develop a proposal for an alternative journal in 1970. However, after LASA failed to secure support from the Ford Foundation and it was unable to fund the proposed journal, the project was carried forward by Chilcote and a group based in Southern California, who were also involved in the Los Angeles Group for Latin American Solidarity (LAGLAS) which at the time was very active in solidarity with Allende’s Chile.
In May 1973, on behalf of the Southern California group, Chilcote and fellow URLA member William Bollinger presented a proposal for a new journal to the URLA members at the LASA Congress in Madison, Wisconsin, who approved the idea. Subsequently the Southern California group decided to proceed with an independent journal and announced its decision in a September 1973 report to the URLA. In addition to Chilcote and Bollinger, the founders included Frances Chilcote, Donald Bray, Marjorie Bray, Timothy Harding, Norma Chinchilla and Carlos Muñoz. Other progressive Southern California academics soon joined the collective, including Nora Hamilton, Richard Harris and Michel Kearney. Many members of the core group had been graduate students at Stanford University where they worked on the ''Hispanic American Report'', edited by Ronald Hilton, which was best known for having revealed in 1960 CIA preparations for the upcoming Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in April 1961. Coming from disciplines such as history, political science, and sociology, they had done research in Latin American countries including Chile, Mexico, Peru, and Brazil and become committed to supporting movements for social justice and revolutionary change.
The founders decided that the new journal would be different not only in content but in its organization, with decisions made by a democratic editorial collective. Ronald Chilcote was elected managing editor, a post he has held ever since. They also decided to publish primarily thematic issues that could examine topics in depth from multiple perspectives. From the beginning, the journal sought contributors from Latin America and assumed the cost of translating manuscripts from Spanish, Portuguese, and occasionally French, a policy that made it unique in the field. The collective recruited leading progressive scholars from the United States and Latin America to serve as editor-reviewers with an approximately equal representation from each geographic area.

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