Community of Latin American states (historical context)

E122344

The Community of Latin American states (historical context) refers to the early 19th-century vision and loose diplomatic-political alignment of newly independent Latin American republics seeking regional solidarity and mutual support after independence from Spain and Portugal.

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf diplomatic alignment
historical political concept
regional integration idea
aimedToCounterbalance European great powers
potential U.S. dominance in the hemisphere
emergedAfter Latin American wars of independence
independence from Portugal
independence from Spain
hasCharacteristic based on shared anti-colonial experience
inspired by republican and liberal ideas
loose diplomatic alignment
not a formal supranational organization
pan-Latin American sentiment
hasConceptualPrecursor idea of a confederation of Spanish American republics
projects of a union of newly independent Latin American states
hasGeographicScope Latin America
hasGoal collective security
coordination of foreign policy
defense of independence
mutual support among Latin American republics
promotion of republican government
regional solidarity
resistance to European recolonization
resistance to external intervention
hasHistoricalContext Monroe Doctrine
surface form: Monroe Doctrine era

post-Napoleonic international order
hasIdeologicalBasis anti-colonial nationalism
liberal constitutionalism
republicanism
hasInfluenceOn 20th-century Latin American regional organizations
later Latin American integration projects
hasLimitation divergent national interests
internal conflicts among Latin American states
limited economic integration
weak institutionalization
hasTemporalContext early 19th century
includesTypicalMembers Chile
Gran Colombia
Mexico
Peru
United Provinces of Central America
isDistinctFrom Community of Latin American and Caribbean States
surface form: Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC)
isRelatedTo Bolivarianism
Congress of Panama (1826)
Latin American regionalism
Pan-Americanism
Simón Bolívar
prefigures modern Latin American multilateral diplomacy

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

First Mexican Republic memberOf Community of Latin American states (historical context)