The Southern Tiger
Chile's Fight for a Democratic and Prosperous Future
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Former Chilean president Ricardo Lagos provides a fascinating glimpse inside his country's meteoric rise on the world stage. A leader in the underground resistance movement against Augusto Pinochet and his Dirty War, Ricardo Lagos burst onto the national stage in 1988 when he gave a speech denouncing the dictator, the first of its kind. Revolution soon followed, as Chileans took to the streets to oust a criminal despot and pave the way for democracy. In The Southern Tiger, Lagos chronicles Chile's journey from terror and repression to a thriving open society, and from crushing poverty to one of the wealthiest nations in Latin America. His thrilling stories of surviving Chile's political prisons, standing up to President George W. Bush over the war in Iraq, and rebuilding Chile's education system demonstrate why President Obama recently called Chile 'a model for the region and the world.' As citizens across the globe rise up to demand more from their governments, The Southern Tiger is an inspiring story of political and economic rebirth in the wake of fear.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lagos, president of Chile from 2000 to 2006, teams up with the managing editors of Foreign Policy magazine to describe his landmark role in Chile's remarkable struggle to overthrow Pinochet's military junta and become a thriving democracy. Lagos was a Socialist leader in the underground resistance when he went on national TV in 1988 to urge his country to vote against Pinochet in the upcoming plebiscite. That televised address turned the tide against the dictator and propelled Lagos to national fame. In his positions as education minister, minister of public works, and eventually president in the post-Pinochet governments, Lagos highlights his accomplishments and though he includes some reflective passages on what he could have improved or where he could have done more, he usually comes across in a flattering light, no matter the occasion. He highlights his sense of humor and sense of equilibrium under the most trying circumstances, such as when he's arrested, imprisoned, and interrogated under Pinochet's regime. He also devotes extensive attention to his unsuccessful efforts to team up with Blair and Clinton to avert the war in Iraq with an alternate resolution and more diplomacy. The writing is merely serviceable, but this is still an inspiring portrait of a humane leader and his efforts to lead an emerging democracy into the 21st century.