Power and Popular Protest: Latin American Social Movements
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ISBN: 0520064143 / Publisher: University of California Press, February 1989
"Treats a very important theme in an excellent analytical framework and addresses the right topics from an insightful perspective. The individual chapters are outstanding because the editor has selected first-rate scholars and inspired them to reflect and build upon previous fine work. Particularly impressive is the ability of the editor and authors to unravel extremely complex, and sometimes murky, issues and events. No other collection brings together such splendid contributions on this topic."--Paul Drake, University of California, San Diego"A superb, focused collection of essays from many of the most perceptive analysts of Latin American politics, one that deftly avoids both structural reductionism on the one hand and historicism on the other. A contribution to Latin American politics and to theories of protest and resistance."--James Scott, Yale University"Eckstein has put together an outstanding collection of work by some of the best Latin Americanists. Taken together, here are a series of studies which are remarkably sensitive to the complex circumstances which pattern protest movements, and to the manifold ways in which protest comes to be expressed."--Frances Fox Piven, CUNY Graduate School and University Center
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Why, in both democratic and authoritarian governments, do the politically and economically weak sometimes take to the streets and not to the ballot boxes? Why do angry workers at times support revolutionary movements but at other times express outrage through footdragging, strike activity, religion, and rituals? And why do similar types of protest movements produce startlingly different results in different countries?The essays in this book—by historians, sociologists, political scientists, and anthropologists—explore these questions in a wide-ranging investigation of the causes and consequences of protest movements in Latin America. Eclectic and insightful, the essays represent a range of subjects, from an examination of the varying faces but common origins of rural guerilla movements, to a discussion of multiclass protests, to an essay on different popular movements similarly grounded in Liberation Theology. Together these studies demonstrate that the patterning of defiance is shaped by structural forces that are independent of whatever rage and psychological states of mind that prompted people to protest. Using solid, empirical research, they examine how the dynamics of defiant acts are rooted in institutional and cultural situations.This volume will attract a wide interdisciplinary audience of scholars, students, and policy-makers and will be an indispensable text for anyone concerned with reducing inequities and injustices around the world, so that oppressed people need not be defiant before their concerns are addressed.
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