Abstract

This essay addresses the problems that the abrupt and in some cases surprising changes that have occurred in the world system in recent years have posed to Cuban foreign political and economic relations. In this contribution, reference is made broadly and schematically to the internal economic, political and ideological processes that, together with the dynamics of the international scene, have conditioned the external projection of the Cuban Revolution. It is thus intended to highlight the indissoluble, although not mechanical or linear, relationship between the development of the Cuban domestic situation (officially known for three years as the Special Period in Times of Peace) and the developments of both state and non-state foreign policy of the largest island of the Antilles.

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