Seminar | Coups d’État in Latin America
On February 17, the seminar “Coups d’État in Latin America: Continuities and Ruptures from the Cold War to Yesterday”was held, in which Sebastián Carassai, member of the Center for Intellectual History (UNQ), participated as a speaker alongside Kevin Coleman (University of Toronto), moderated by Steven Levitsky (Harvard).
Coups in Latin America are often treated as Cold War artifacts. But some of the patterns that produced them are still active. Building on Coups d’État in Cold War Latin America, 1964–1982 (Cambridge, 2025), the editors extend their analysis to the present, tracing how two forces continue to reshape Latin American politics: US intervention (now morphing from military coups to economic extortion to intimidation). and the Christian right (which has shifted from defending the status quo to remaking society in its image). Contemporary cases —from Bukele’s El Salvador to Milei’s Argentina to current US pressures on Colombia and Brazil—reveal both continuities and innovations.
📍The event, organized by David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies from Harvard University, was held on February 17 at 12 p.m. (EST), in a hybrid format. This event is presented in collaboration with the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs (Harvard).
Speakers:
• Sebastián Carassai (Centro de Historia Intelectual / UNQ)
• Kevin Coleman (University of Toronto)
Moderator:
• Steven Levitsky (Harvard)