Dominican Republic
Chapter 1. Dominican Republic: Historical Setting
Sketch of the landing at Hispaniola, reputedly drawn by Christopher
Columbus
THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC EXPERIENCED many setbacks on the road to the
democratic system under which it functioned in the late 1980s. The nation did
not enjoy full independence until 1844, when it emerged from twenty-two years of
occupation by Haiti; this liberation came later than that of most Latin American
countries. Reacceptance of Spanish rule from 1861 to 1865 demonstrated the
republic's insecurity and dependence on larger powers to protect it and to
define its status. Dominican vulnerability to intervention from abroad was also
made evident by the United States military occupation of 1916-24 and by a more
limited action by United States forces during a brief civil war in 1965.
Politically, Dominican history has been defined by an almost continuous
competition for supremacy among caudillos of authoritarian ideological
convictions. Political and regional competition overlapped to a great extent
because mainly conservative leaders from the south and the east pitted
themselves against generally more liberal figures from the northern part of the
Valle del Cibao (the Cibao Valley, commonly called the Cibao). Traditions of
personalism, militarism, and social and economic elitism locked the country into
decades of debilitating wars, conspiracies, and despotism that drained its
resources and undermined its efforts to establish liberal constitutional rule.
In the late 1980s, the republic was still struggling to emerge from the
shadow of the ultimate Dominican caudillo, Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Molina
(1930-61), who emerged from the military and held nearly absolute power
throughout his rule. The apparent establishment of a democratic process in 1978
was a promising development; however, the survival of democracy appeared to be
closely linked to the country's economic fortunes, which had declined steadily
since the mid-1970s. As it had throughout its history, the republic continued to
struggle with the nature of its domestic politics and with the definition of its
economic and political role in the wider world.
Data as of December 1989
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