ABSTRACT

Central America sprang into the consciousness of the US public in the late 1970s, propelled by the Nicaraguan revolution and the brutal civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador. This book presents a historical and analytical interpretation of recent Central American crises. Using a consistent comparative framework, Dr. Weaver sorts out the relations among economic growth, social organization, and political structure and offers explanations for the historically divergent developments among the five Central American nations. By setting those events in a broader Latin American context and illuminating the relationships between domestic and international influences, Weaver shows how rapid changes in the social organization of economic production in some periods affected social structures and configurations of political power while at other times, political conflicts conditioned and shaped subsequent patterns of economic expansion.