Republic of Costa Rica : a case study on the process of democracy building

Date

2008

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Queen's University, Kingston, CA

Abstract

The gradual creation of a constitutional system and codification of norms and liberal reforms slowly consolidated the Costa Rican Democracy. The paper asserts that a social tendency in most Costa Rican policies, groups and civil movements before 1948 was fundamental to the interventionist character of the State apparatus in subsequent years. The second part of this investigation presents the latest (2008) indicators of Costa Rica’s democratic system and the historical nature of developments of national institutions that point to the logic behind some of the challenges and contradictions of present-day Costa Rica.

Description

The table of contents for this item can be shared with the requester. The requester may then choose one chapter, up to 10% of the item, as per the Fair Dealing provision of the Canadian Copyright Act

Keywords

DEMOCRATIZATION, COUNTRY STUDIES, POLITICAL HISTORY, POLITICAL ECONOMY, CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM, CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS, GOVERNMENT ROLE, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK, COSTA RICA, NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA

Citation

DOI