Social movements amidst democratic transitions: Lessons from the Brazilian countryside

2000 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 59-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter P. Houtzager
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Verónica Pérez Bentancur ◽  
Cecilia Rocha-Carpiuc

In Latin America, it is difficult to win approval for policies that allow induced abortion and same-sex marriage. Social movements face more obstacles in promoting these policies than in promoting other gender and LGBTQ policies because abortion and same-sex marriage are particularly contentious issues. These policies involve doctrinal or countercultural topics, and supporters of these legislative changes must confront groups that mobilize to block these reform efforts (Blofield 2006; Corrales 2015; Díez 2015; Friedman 2019; Grzymała-Busse 2015; Htun 2003). Yet in the period following democratic transitions, some Latin American countries successfully liberalized their legislation concerning abortion and marriage equality.


2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip O. Nyinguro ◽  
Eric E. Otenyo

Author(s):  
María Inclán

This chapter presents the theoretical arguments of the book, which come from the literatures on political opportunities and democratic transitions, in particular protracted transitions and transitions from below. The chapter first compares Mexico’s democratic transition to other democratization processes in which insurgent social movements play a crucial role, such as the cases of El Salvador and South Africa. Then it provides an analysis of the opportunities that democratic transitions may open for the mobilization, success, and survival of an insurgent social movement. Third, hypotheses contextualized to the Mexican case illustrate how these expectations may influence the development of a specific movement’s cycle of protests, negotiating success, and chances of survival within a protracted democratic transition.


ICR Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 105-127
Author(s):  
Deina Abdelkader

In transitioning to democracy, rationalists assume that either the masses or the elites bring about change. This paper hypothesises that there is a causal relationship between the actors involved in social change and the end product the progress of democratic transition and whether revolution from below or from above is more likely to bring about the transition. By examining Pacting Theory as a democratic transition theory, this paper will analyse the role of the military in Egypts democratisation process. The interplay of the military powers and relinquishing those powers to a civilian government will have implications for social movements theory and the approaches to democratic transition theory.


Author(s):  
Donatella della Porta ◽  
Massimiliano Andretta ◽  
Tiago Fernandes ◽  
Eduardo Romanos ◽  
Markos Vogiatzoglou

This volume addresses long-term effects of democratic transitions on social movements in Italy, Greece, Portugal, and Spain. From the theoretical point of view, the main focus of reflection is on the long-term impact of eventful moments on social movements, especially the causal mechanisms through which legacies and memories of transformative protest events are produced and reproduced over time, enhancing and constraining contemporary movements’ repertoires and frames. The paths of democratic transitions set norms and institutions that affect protests in the long term. Without taking a deterministic view, we examine the ways in which the past is revisited and read anew how stories are selected, what is resilient, and what is transformed. While research on social movements started in Europe with historical work on labor movements, the impact of historical legacies and memories on social movements has not been much theorized. More in general, while there is a growing interest in memory, there is little systematic theory or comparative research on ways in which important events have long-lasting institutional consequences and are remembered by future generations. With this volume, we address this gap by reflecting on the ways in which critical junctures, especially the ones produced through mobilization from below, affect the social movements that follow. In particular, we analyze transitions to democracy as points of departure and look at the ways in which their paths—and especially social movements’ participation in them—play a role in enhancing and constraining the movements that follow.


Author(s):  
María Inclán

This chapter introduces the main argument of the book, namely that democratic transitions bring about opportunities for insurgent social movements to mobilize, succeed, and survive, but these opportunities do not necessarily follow each other progressively. A democratization process might open up opportunities to launch a cycle of protests, and the movement’s great mobilization capacity might create opportunities for it to survive. However, these openings might not be enough to reach significant concessions. Opportunities for success depend on whether negotiations with insurgents are included in democratizing pacts among political elites. To illustrate these arguments, the chapter provides an account of the development of the Zapatista movement from its public emergence in 1994 through 2003. This time frame contextualizes the movement within Mexico’s democratic transition. The chapter closes with an overview of the organization of the book.


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