哥斯达黎加废除军事与培养和平主义:反思但有限的和平?

Mohd Firdaus A. J.
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于拉丁美洲和平、安全和军民关系的现有文献直到最近才认识到哥斯达黎加例外论的历史制度根源。虽然冷战的安全困境和军事独裁是大多数中美洲国家的共同先例,但哥斯达黎加的非军事化和和平主义起源是独特和无与伦比的。本文并没有将1948年内战后的发展视为例外主义,而是试图将它们的成功正常化。本文考察了哥斯达黎加在20世纪50年代的政治发展,以及joses María Hipólito菲格雷斯·费雷尔在战后永久废除军队的历史性决定是否有助于解释有机平民和平的制度化过程。哥斯达黎加放弃国防权利的决定总是被浪漫化为“进步”,是冷战时期的一种反常现象。废除军事、和平主义和民主和平之间关系的现实是多方面的和复杂的。将1950年代哥斯达黎加不合逻辑的和平主义思想延续下去,并将其套用到目前全球民主和平的论点中,多少有些不准确。根据多年来对拉丁美洲安全问题的研究,这篇文章重振了哥斯达黎加的例外论。它分析了在面对不利环境时做出正确选择的国家如何培养和平主义。考虑到研究当地和平史的历史制度方法,本文说明了哥斯达黎加特殊和平形成的关键时刻,结束战争的路径依赖,以及最终决定废除军队。对国家在教育、卫生和生产力方面进步的路径依赖只证实了哥斯达黎加独特的政治轨迹,这种轨迹不容易复制或比较。理解这一特殊性应该提醒人们注意任何关于中美洲安全中的哥斯达黎加例外论或自由建设和平中的民主和平理论的新辩论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Abolishing Military and Cultivating Pacifism in Costa Rica: Reflective but Limited Peace?
Existing literature on peace, security and civil-military relations in Latin America only recently recognises the historical institutional sources of Costa Rican exceptionalism. While the Cold War's security predicament and the military dictatorship are common antecedents for most Central American states, Costa Rican demilitarisation and pacifism origins are unique and incomparable. Rather than treating post-1948 civil war development as exceptionalism, this paper seeks to normalise their success. The paper examines the political development of Costa Ricans in the 1950s and whether José María Hipólito Figueres Ferrer's historic decision to permanently abolish the military after the war helped to explain the institutionalisation process of organic civilian peace. While Costa Rican decisions to abandon its defence rights are always romanticised as "progressive" and an anomaly during the Cold War. The reality of relations between military abolishment, pacifism and democratic peace is multidimensional and complex. To perpetuate illogical pacificism reflections from Costa Rica in the 1950s and prescribes into present arguments for global democratic peace is somewhat imprecise. Drawing from years of research on Security in Latin America, this article reinvigorates Costa Rican exceptionalism. It analyses the cultivation of pacificism of those that have made the right choices in the face of adverse circumstances. Considering the historical institutional approach in researching local peace history, the paper illustrates a critical juncture that set peculiar peace formation, the path-dependent that ends the war, and the eventual decision to abolish the military in Costa Rica. The path dependence on national progress in education, health, and productivity only confirmed the unique political trajectory of Costa Rica, wherein they cannot be easily replicated or comparable. Understanding this distinctiveness should serve as a reminder of any renewed debate of Costa Rican exceptionalism in Central American security or democratic peace theory in liberal peacebuilding.
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