Lowell Gustafson, PhD

Professor of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Villanova University

  • Villanova PA

Lowell Gustafson, PhD, is an expert in the politics, political structure and cultural heritage of Latin America.

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3 min

Concerns Persist Over the State of Ecuadorian Democracy

On August 9, 2023, Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was ambushed and killed following a campaign rally in Quito. The Alausí-born journalist-turned-assemblyman had long been a proponent of social and governmental reform, framing his election bid as a crusade against the drug traffickers, corrupt corporate interests and “political mafia” besetting his country. His assassination has, in turn, sparked concerns and discussion over the current state of democracy in Ecuador. Lowell Gustafson, PhD, is an expert on Latin American affairs and a professor of political science in Villanova University’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. From his perspective, Villavicencio’s murder stands as the latest chapter in a saga of malfeasance, intimidation and violence in the region. “This is not new in Latin American political history,” said Dr. Gustafson. “The role of private armies funded by economic sectors beyond state control has been an issue often for the national period. It has taken a stark turn with the riches pouring in from illegal drugs.” In Ecuador, “narco-capitalism” has emerged as a particularly corrosive force. According to Dr. Gustafson, Albanian, Mexican and South American criminal outfits established themselves within the nation by the early 2010s, drawn by the country’s vast network of ports and its proximity to coca-rich Colombia and Peru. “That became a problem for stability in 2016, when the government of Colombia signed a peace agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia [or FARC],” he stated. “FARC had long controlled cocaine trafficking routes from southern Colombia to Ecuador’s ports on the Pacific Ocean. With their dominance gone, other cartels began to compete for control.” Since the opening of this power vacuum, the situation in Ecuador has grown increasingly volatile, with the governmental response ham-fisted at best and faciliatory at worst. Under the presidential administrations of Rafael Correa, Lenín Moreno and Guillermo Lasso, the cartels succeeded in infiltrating the country’s privatized ports and airports, seizing control of the nation’s prison system and contributing to an ever-growing wave of crime. “Violence against public officials and by vigilante groups have steadily increased since 2018,” Dr. Gustafson said. “With the familiar choice between bribes and cooperation or violence, it is no wonder that cartel influence throughout the Ecuadorian state and military is widely discussed.” While Dr. Gustafson acknowledges the Ecuadorian government’s culpability for this disastrous situation and its escalation, he also cites another factor: the United States’ “war on drugs.” According to the professor, the longstanding U.S. policy has only served to prop up criminal enterprises south of the border, fueling a market for illicit substances. “After a half-century of the war and over a trillion dollars spent on it, coca cultivation in Colombia in 2020 was at an all-time high,” he shared. “The war on drugs has led to the continued power of illegal drug cartels in many countries, now including Ecuador.” In Dr. Gustafson’s estimation, the recent murder of Villavicencio only brings greater attention to this unfortunate state of affairs—a state of affairs common throughout Latin America. “With his consistent and outspoken critique of the cartels’ influence in Ecuador, Villavicencio courageously knew he faced the threat of violence,” he concluded. “The assassination of a presidential candidate brings all of this to a higher level within Ecuador, but the likely reason for [his murder] plagues Mexico, El Salvador and other Latin American nations.”

Lowell Gustafson, PhD

1 min

The Increasing Tension Between the U.S. and Iran

Two oil tankers were attacked in the Gulf of Oman and an unmanned drone was shot down in the last two weeks, escalating tensions between the United States and Iran. After a last-minute bailout of a retaliatory airstrike, President Donald Trump announced additional sanctions against Iran on June 24. Lowell Gustafson, PhD, a political science professor, taught American foreign policy and a course titled "Theories of War and Peace" for several years. He says, with the talk of airstrikes and President Trump claiming there will be "obliteration like you've never seen before," Congress needs to step in.  "Congress should immediately hold hearings and vote on exactly what conditions would need to be met before such an order was given. Before Congress makes an initial authorization to use force against Iran, the military should not follow any order to do so by the President. Our founders gave Congress the power to declare war since a single executive, whether monarch or president, should not have the authority to make such a weighty decision unilaterally." Dr. Gustafson noted that so far, sanctions have proven counterproductive and a "unilateral presidential decision to use force undermines American constitutional democracy." He said the president's failure to think systematically about this issue leaves us moving from tactic to tactic.

Lowell Gustafson, PhD

Social

Areas of Expertise

Political Science
International Political Economy
Latin American Politics
International Relations Theories
Politics

Biography

The politics of Latin America, an immense region whose vast geographic umbrella encompasses the diverse populations of 34 nations spanning Mexico, Central and South America and the Caribbean, is an eclectic mix of dictatorships and emerging democracies. Dr. Gustafson can share his firsthand experience with the rich cultural heritage of Latin America and discuss how the region's current political structures could shape its future role in the global community.

Education

University of Virginia

PhD

University of Virginia

MA

North Park University

BA

Affiliations

  • International Big History Association

Select Media Appearances

Ecuadorians Are Picking a New President, but Their Demands for Safety Will Be Hard to Meet

Associated Press  online

2023-10-12

What awaits the election's winner is a shorter-than-normal 15-month run as president of Ecuador, which is engulfed in a surge of violence tied to drug trafficking... "There's nothing that fails like success," said Lowell Gustafson, a Latin American politics professor at Villanova University. "Whoever wins this election is going to have to deal with this… but I don't know what can be expected from the president in that kind of short time with what sure look to be virtually intractable problems."

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Latin America's Right Turn

U.S. News & World Report  online

2017-01-09

The late 1990s and early 2000s was a time of triumph for Latin America's leftists. Venezuelan firebrand Hugo Chávez was swept into power in 1999, with a socialist, anti-U.S. ideology that inspired many of his peers in the region. In 2002, Brazil elected Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a founder of the leftist Workers' Party. Left-leaning Nestor Kirchner and his wife, Cristina, took the presidency in Argentina. In 2005, Evo Morales was elected president in Bolivia, followed by Rafael Correa, who won the same office in Ecuador the following year... "The left could easily enjoy a resurgence if the current leaders of the post pink wave falter," says Lowell Gustafson, professor of political science at Villanova University.

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Select Academic Articles

Big History, Political Identity, and Cosmopolitan Citizenship

International Big History Association

2016

Big History and a new geopolitics are supporting the development of global and even cosmopolitan citizenship. Changing experiences of the relationship among land, water, climate, history, and politics have led to changes in key components of citizenship, such as political identity and security. A citizen feels part of a homeland, often has been born and raised there, seeks to protect it, and is committed to its future. Now homeland is no longer restricted to a nation, but encompasses the entire globe within the cosmos. The “land of my birth” is no longer only a nation, but also the Earth. Threats to the homeland are no longer restricted to foreign armies or terrorist groups, but include exhaust pipes and smokestacks that endanger both the atmosphere and the security of humanity.

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The Geopolitics of Global Citizenship

Globalization and Global Citizenship: Interdisciplinary Approaches

2016

National citizenship has long been associated with connection to particular territory and the obligation to defend "the land of my birth." "Defending the nest" is common to other species as well, who are equally concerned with survival. Political identity has often been related to specified territory; it has also been formed by narratives about how national citizens arrived and developed in their homeland. Increasing numbers of people see the entire globe as their own and humanity's homeland. Threats to the homeland are no longer restricted to foreign armies or terrorists attacking a portion of the globe's surface. Threats to the home that sustains humanity and all life include exhaust pipes and smokestacks. Increasing numbers of people identify themselves as global citizens who have an obligation to defend the globe in ways that can sustain human security from environmental collapse. New long-term histories of the common origins of human ancestors, their relationship to the globe, and their global migration from Africa to the rest of the world have begun to establish new, global identities. Narratives of humanity's common origins and environmental narratives of our common destiny on our small planet bolster the development of global citizenship.

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From Particles to Politics

Teaching and Researching Big History: Exploring a New Scholarly Field

2014

In this chapter, we investigate the gradual and uneven development in the complexity of polity, or the sustained, structured relationships that incorporate earlier ones and go on to be subsumed by subsequent relationships. This takes us from the very early and long-lasting relationships among two types of quarks to the emergence of human polity, with annihilations, extinctions, and wars as part of the often unpredictable process. Can the study of this development add to the likelihood that it will move more thoroughly through the latest transition toward the greatest known complexity in polity, or will it face the temporary or even permanent effects of entropy?

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