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Bolivarianism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bolivarian Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Bolivarianism of Hugo Chávez | Developments During His Administration | After two attempts of coup d’état (February and November 1992) and two years in prison, the Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chavez was democratically elected president of Venezuela on December 6, 1998. A left-wing populist, Chavez had the support of an ...
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The literature behind Venezuelan Bolivarianism. - IN AN INTERVIEW with a Caracas newspaper in 2005, British historian M : Encyclopedia.com ... IN AN INTERVIEW with a Caracas newspaper in 2005, British historian Malcolm Deas claimed that "Bolivarianism is an ideology without content." (1) Whether Deas is right or not,
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A selection of articles related to Bolivarian Revolution - Components of Chávez's Bolivarianism ... Bolivarian Revolution, Bolivarian Revolution - Components of Chávez's Bolivarianism, Bolivarian Revolution - Domestic, Bolivarian Revolution - Foreign, Bolivarian Revolution - General links,
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Chávez's version of Bolivarianism, although drawing heavily from Simón Bolívar's ideals, was also influenced by the writings of Marxist historian Federico Brito Figueroa. Chávez was also thoroughly steeped in the South American tradition of ... Chávez's version of Bolivarianism, although drawing heavily from...
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Definition of Bolivarianism in an online ecyclopedia or dictionary. ... Bolivarianism is a doctrine somewhat popular in Latin American countries, named after the South American general Simon Bolivar.
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By Stephen Lendman ; 22 February, 2007 ; Countercurrents.org; Hugo Chavez Frias gained an Ecuadoran ally last November when voters rejected Washington's choice and the country's richest man and elected ... Correa is a populist economist and self-styled "humanist, ... Correa took office January 15 in a country of 13 million,
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Chavez said to Fidel, we are developing Bolivarianism. Fidel responded by saying, it doesn't matter what you are developing, you could call it Christianity, the important thing is that it is directed to social progress.”...
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Bolivarianism occurred in various South American countries, but its heart and stronghold is in Venezuela, where most movements and the government define themselves as Bolivarian and the transformation process is called Bolivarian Process or Bolivarian Revolution.
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