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Shaping the political arena : critical junctures, the labor movement, and regime dynamics in Latin America / Ruth Berins Collier and David Collier.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Notre Dame, IN : University of Notre Dame Press, 2002.Description: xx, 877 pages : tables, charts (black and white) ; 24 cm.ISBN:
  • 9780268017729
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HD8110.5 .C65 2002
Contents:
pt. 1. Introduction — 1. Framework : critical junctures and historical legacies — 2. Context : the labor movement and the state in Latin America — pt. 2. Cleavage — 3. Labor : emergence of worker organization and protest — 4. State : reformist challenge to oligarchic domination — pt. 3. Critical juncture — 5. Incorporation : recasting state-labor relations — pt. 4. Legacy — 6. Aftermath : reaction to incorporation and post incorporation dynamics — 7. Heritage : between hegemony and crisis — pt. V. Summation — 8. Conclusion : shaping the political arena.
Summary: Based on a comparative-historical analysis of eight Latin American countries, this book traces the impact of a "critical juncture" : a period of fundamental political reorientation in which new institutions are founded and countries are set on distinct trajectories of change. The analysis focuses on alternative state responses to the newly radicalized working class and organized labor movements that emerged in the initial decades of the 20th century. It examines the shift from state repression to the incorporation of the labor movement, showing how national leaders — including Perón in Argentina, Vargas in Brazil, and Cárdenas in Mexico — sought to impose a new institutional framework on working-class politics. The book argues that different strategies of control and mobilization left distinct legacies in terms of political coalitions, party systems, and modes of political conflict. These outcomes in turn influenced patterns of regime change, including the democratic or authoritarian path each country followed through the turbulent 1960s and 1970s. From the perspective of 1990, just prior to the book's publication, the concluding chapter maps criteria for assessing whether Latin America was, at the end of the twentieth century, entering a new critical juncture.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Recommended bibliography book Recommended bibliography book TBS Barcelona Libre acceso HD8110.5 COL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available B01466

Includes bibliographical references (p. [797]-853) and indexes.

pt. 1. Introduction — 1. Framework : critical junctures and historical legacies — 2. Context : the labor movement and the state in Latin America — pt. 2. Cleavage — 3. Labor : emergence of worker organization and protest — 4. State : reformist challenge to oligarchic domination — pt. 3. Critical juncture — 5. Incorporation : recasting state-labor relations — pt. 4. Legacy — 6. Aftermath : reaction to incorporation and post incorporation dynamics — 7. Heritage : between hegemony and crisis — pt. V. Summation — 8. Conclusion : shaping the political arena.

Based on a comparative-historical analysis of eight Latin American countries, this book traces the impact of a "critical juncture" : a period of fundamental political reorientation in which new institutions are founded and countries are set on distinct trajectories of change. The analysis focuses on alternative state responses to the newly radicalized working class and organized labor movements that emerged in the initial decades of the 20th century. It examines the shift from state repression to the incorporation of the labor movement, showing how national leaders — including Perón in Argentina, Vargas in Brazil, and Cárdenas in Mexico — sought to impose a new institutional framework on working-class politics. The book argues that different strategies of control and mobilization left distinct legacies in terms of political coalitions, party systems, and modes of political conflict. These outcomes in turn influenced patterns of regime change, including the democratic or authoritarian path each country followed through the turbulent 1960s and 1970s. From the perspective of 1990, just prior to the book's publication, the concluding chapter maps criteria for assessing whether Latin America was, at the end of the twentieth century, entering a new critical juncture.

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