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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the emergence of left-wing politics in two of the largest South American nations: Argentina and Brazil. It looks in particular at the transformation of democracy seen as "point of arrival" into democracy seen as an unending struggle for greater equality.Introduction 1. Interrogating Democracy. From Political Regimes to Politics 2. Trade Unions and Social Movement Organizations Within and Beyond Neoliberal Times 3. Self-organizing. Grassroots Activation 4. Networking. Horizontal Deliberation by Default 5. Demanding. The Political Effect of Social Demands 6. From Heterogeneous Complexity to Antagonistic Simplicity. The Institution of the Limit 7. From Disagreement to Participation? A Move to the Left Conclusion: The Politics of Democratization: Democratic Subjectivities in Post-transition Contexts
This is an important book for our era of disillusionment with representational democracy. Latin Americanists interested in democracy beyond the state and political leaders will find a wealth of empirical and theoretical insights into how ordinary people come to mobilize and challenge a global paradigm. But it is also a book for all those interested in democracy as a process not a 'thing.' - Jenny Pearce, University of Bradford, UK
Ferrero synthesizes and extends a number of influential, broadly post-Marxian social theoretical resources, by way of subtle, illuminating, and substantive case-study-based analyses of the dynamics of the 'left turn' in Latin America. Democracy Against Neoliberalism in Argentina and Brazil is an original, compelling work of social theorizing, which also deserves a wide readership among those committed to the radically democratic promise of an emerging new global Left. - Chamsy el-Ojeili, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Although of immense global interest, recent pols5
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