Libro
Autoría
López, Pabel
;
HADAD, MARIA GISELA
;
González, Miguel
Fecha
2025
Editorial y Lugar de Edición
Routledge. Taylor and Francis Group
ISBN
9781032212388
Resumen
Información suministrada por el agente en
SIGEVA
LIBRO EN PRENSA (aún sin ISBN)AbstractThe last decade in Latin America has witnessed a process of socio-political re-composition and reconfiguration, linked in part to the so-called exhaustion or end of the “first progressive cycle” to the advance of governments with authoritarian narratives and/or neoconservative and ultra-neoliberal policies to the re-emergence of collective action, citizen rebellion and/or social mobilization and contestation of government policies in seve...
LIBRO EN PRENSA (aún sin ISBN)AbstractThe last decade in Latin America has witnessed a process of socio-political re-composition and reconfiguration, linked in part to the so-called exhaustion or end of the “first progressive cycle” to the advance of governments with authoritarian narratives and/or neoconservative and ultra-neoliberal policies to the re-emergence of collective action, citizen rebellion and/or social mobilization and contestation of government policies in several countries; to the deployment of a so-called “second progressive wave”; as well as to the generalized expansion of the agro-extractivist frontier in almost the entire region. Likewise, given the lack of state responses to the various claims and demands of the different social mobilizations, the tendencies vary from state measures of violence and repression, criminalization and persecution of social protest, to the demobilization of protest and the bureaucratization of social organizations.This publication proposes to reflect, update, problematize, and discuss the current processes of reorganization of collective action and political expression in Latin America based on questions such as: What are the continuities, ruptures, and changes of social movements in Latin America today? How has their relationship with the State changed, and what are their new expectations and forms of dispute and organization? What forms of political action emerge in a dynamic of expansion and exacerbation of extractivism and the continuity of re-primarizing, flexible, and precarious development models? How are politics and collective action reorganized from the territories in the face of the advance of the extractivist frontier in the region? Is it possible to think about the current forms of collective action and protest organization, as well as the repertoires and imaginaries of socio-territorial and societal movements, beyond the paradigms of development and state-centrism? What about the autonomous dimension of social movements today? Is there or can there be a real margin of autonomy in the proposals of social organizations? Which articulations have been maintained, which have been weakened, and which have been created between movements of different types? How is the social struggle reconfigured in the context of the advance of the fascist and repressive right wing in the region? These are some of the questions that inspire our proposal, to which we have invited a myriad of established and emerging scholars to contribute. This book will be of interest to both students and researchers in the field of social science in general, and more specifically in international development, political ecology, critical geography, social anthropology, as well as activists engaged in socio-ecological/eco-territorial movements.
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Palabras Clave
LATIN AMERICAEXTRACTIVISMSOCIAL MOVEMENTSSOCIO-TERRITORIAL STRUGGLES