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The Dominican Republic and the United States: From Imperialism to Transnationalism (United States and the Americas)
Published in Hardcover by University of Georgia Press (1998)
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Dominicans within US Hegemony
Historical Dictionary of Inter-American Organizations
Published in Hardcover by Scarecrow Press (04 December, 1997)
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Where is the clearly explained relationship (causes and consequences) of years of recurring and assorted foreign interventions to Dominican internal instability, habitual tendency of loan grabbing-defaulting, and stubborn regionalisms? It is true that Atkins and Wilson do not directly excuse North American interventions. Actually, they criticize it and honestly unveil the rampant racism, avarice and demeaning manners in some US policies and diplomats. Yet, the book's literary structure arranges historical events in a way that may produce in the reader the idea that, after all, it was the Dominicans who attracted intervention. Consequently, (following the logic of this thought) if they would not have been clamoring for European protection; if they would have stayed quiet and kept a democratic government running; and most importantly, if they would have at least tried to maintain the interest payment on their foreign debt, most surely the US would never have intervened. Unfortunately, by trying to explain political behavior in a vacuum, (with only a modest relation to US-Dominican identities, economic circumstances, survival tactics, cultural values, etc.) the Dominican predicament not only looks simplistic, moreover, it looks deserving! There is a lesson here that serves us for when we get the call to choose between a history that supports status quo (which promotes complacency), and a history that rocks its foundations (with the added warning against presumption). In the hands of a creative teacher, then, Atkins and Wilson's book is certainly a practical book for undergraduate and graduate courses in US imperialism and Dominican history. Furthermore, however, this work is an excellent introduction to anybody interested on the subject.