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Examines factors that prompt leaders in post-revolutionary states to employ repression or accommodation, drawing on statistical analysis and case studies of Iran, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Bolivia to examine the effects of these choices on how the domestic opposition reacts, what type of political system develops in the new state, and whether or not the leaders who institute these policies survive in power in the long run. Krain is assistant professor of political science and international relations at the College of Wooster.
Year: 2000
Hardcover
Condtition: Very Good