Cuba: Order and Revolution |
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Página 13
The crucial third article stated "that the government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of ...
The crucial third article stated "that the government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of ...
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Contenido
1 | |
11 | |
12 | |
Imperialism and a Pluralized Economy | 19 |
Government Authority | 28 |
The Purposes of Government | 33 |
The Political Party System | 38 |
Cleavages outside the Party System | 44 |
The Communist Party | 306 |
The Ruling Elite | 307 |
Party Membership | 315 |
The Communist Youth Union | 321 |
Functions of the Communist Party | 323 |
Internal Party Structure | 330 |
Party Schools | 336 |
The Partys Claim to Rule | 337 |
Governing through Regulation and Distribution 19331958 | 54 |
The Retreat of Empire and the Rise of Hegemony | 58 |
Hegemony and the Economy | 66 |
Social Mobilization | 71 |
Economic Growth and Social Welfare | 72 |
Government Authority | 76 |
The Weight of Government | 80 |
The Purposes of Government | 84 |
Political Cleavages and Parties | 95 |
The Breakdown of the Political System | 110 |
The Politics of Breakdown | 123 |
International Influences Society and the Economy | 137 |
Hegemony and Revolutionary Politics | 139 |
Social Mobilization through Education | 165 |
The Economy and Social Welfare | 173 |
Establishing a New Government | 191 |
Government Authority and the Centralization of Power | 193 |
Structuring Revolutionary Politics | 206 |
The Formation of the Communist Party | 210 |
Social Bases and Political Purposes | 218 |
Social Effects of Redistribution | 221 |
Bureaucratization and Social Change | 233 |
The Constitution of 1976 and the Formalization of the State | 243 |
The Law and the Courts | 249 |
Mass Political Participation | 260 |
The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution | 261 |
The Cuban Womens Federation | 267 |
The Cuban Labor Confederation | 271 |
Youth Organizations | 279 |
The Political Impact of Popular Participation in Government | 281 |
Elections and Electoral Procedures | 286 |
Political Mobilization | 298 |
Measuring the Public Mood | 303 |
The Civic Soldier | 341 |
The Military Mission of the Armed Forces | 345 |
The Socioeconomic Mission of the Armed Forces | 356 |
The Political Mission of the Armed Forces | 364 |
Setting Public Policy | 381 |
Setting Economic Policy | 383 |
Setting Intellectual and Scientific Policy | 391 |
Policymaking and Social Institutions | 408 |
Legislation and Legislative Processes | 415 |
Planning for the Nation | 417 |
Agrarian Conflict and Peasant Politics | 423 |
Agrarian Conflict before the Revolution | 424 |
Revolution Revolutionary Rule and Agrarian Conflict | 435 |
The National Association of Small Peasants | 445 |
Political Culture | 464 |
Political Participation Cooperation and Individualism | 465 |
Explaining Continuity and Change after the Revolution | 472 |
Change among Students in the Early 1960s | 474 |
National Integration | 478 |
Forming the New Socialist Citizen | 485 |
Women and the Revolution | 494 |
Social Stress and Revolutionary Change | 504 |
The Impact of International Economic Factors on Internal Affairs Three Perspectives | 513 |
Changes in the Height of Cubans | 515 |
Racial Inequality in Public Health | 521 |
Textual Changes in the Draft Constitution of 1976 and the Draft Family Code | 527 |
Members of the Peoples Socialist Party in the Communist Partys Central Committee | 533 |
Cooperation among Cuban Scientists | 535 |
Notes | 541 |
630 | |
667 | |
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Página 13 - III. That the government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of life, property, and individual liberty, and for discharging the obligations with respect to Cuba imposed by the treaty of Paris on the United States, now to be assumed and undertaken by the government of Cuba.