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was worth mentoring and supporting his endeavors for over a decade. Eduardo would like to give a special acknowledgment to Christopher. Mitchell (New York ...
Reshaping the in

Political Arena

Latin America

From Resisting Neoliberalism to the Second Incorporation

Edited by Eduardo Silva and Federico M. Rossi

University of Pittsburgh Press

Published by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15260 Copyright © 2018, University of Pittsburgh Press All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Printed on acid-free paper 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Cataloging-in-Publication data is available from the Library of Congress ISBN 13: 978-0-8229-6512-1 ISBN 10: 0-8229-6512-6512-7 Cover art: Mural by David Hernández, licensed by CC BY-SA 2.0 Cover design by Melissa Dias-Mandoly

For Paul Drake

Contents

Acknowledgments  000 Chapter 1. Introduction: Reshaping the Political Arena in Latin America   000 Federico M. Rossi and Eduardo Silva

Part I: Social Movements Chapter 2. Introduction to Part I: Social Movements and the Second Wave of (Territorial) Incorporation in Latin America   000 Federico M. Rossi Chapter 3. Social Movements and the Second Incorporation in Bolivia and Ecuador  000 Eduardo Silva Chapter 4. The Incorporation of Popular Sectors and Social Movements in Venezuelan Twenty-First-Century Socialism  000 María Pilar García-Guadilla Chapter 5. Social Movements, the New “Social Question,” and the Second Incorporation of the Popular Sectors in Argentina and Brazil   000 Federico M. Rossi

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Part II: Trade Unions Chapter 6. Introduction to Part II: Labor Unions in Latin America: Incorporation and Reincorporation under the New Left   000 Ruth Berins Collier Chapter 7. Socialism without Workers? Trade Unions and the New Left in Bolivia and Ecuador  000 Jorge León Trujillo and Susan Spronk Chapter 8. Conflicting Currents within the Pro-Chávez Labor Movement and the Dynamics of Decision Making   000 Steve Ellner Chapter 9. The Labor Movement and the Erosion of Neoliberal Hegemony: Brazil and Argentina   000 Julián Gindin and Adalberto Cardoso

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Part III: Political Parties Chapter 10. Introduction to Part III: Political Parties in Latin America’s Second Wave of Incorporation   000 Kenneth M. Roberts Chapter 11. From Movements to Governments: Comparing Bolivia’s MAS and Ecuador’s PAIS   000 Catherine Conaghan Chapter 12. The Second Wave of Incorporation and Political Parties in the Venezuelan Petrostate   000 Daniel Hellinger Chapter 13. The Politics of Incorporation: Party Systems, Political Leaders, and the State in Argentina and Brazil   000 Pierre Ostiguy and Aaron Schneider Chapter 14. Conclusion: Reflections on the Second Wave of Popular Incorporation for a Post-Neoliberal Era   000 Eduardo Silva Notes  000 References  000 Contributors  000 Index  000

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Acknowledgments

This volume originated in Federico M. Rossi’s proposal for a conference based on key ideas and concepts published in his dissertation (2011) from the European University Institute, which have subsequently appeared in Latin American Politics and Society (2015) and in a revised version of the dissertation published by Cambridge University Press (2017). We thank Cambridge University Press for the permission to reprint portions of Federico’s book here. The editors wish to thank Ludovico Feoli, director of the Center for InterAmerican Policy and Research (CIPR) at Tulane University, for his steadfast support of this project. CIPR made available generous resources to hold the initial conference From Resistance to Neoliberalism to the Second Wave of Incorporation, “Comparative Perspectives on Reshaping the Political Arena,” Tulane University, October 26–27, 2012. Those resources were augmented with funds from the Friezo Family Foundation Chair in Political Science. CIPR subsequently provided invaluable assistance in the preparation of the manuscript for publication. We owe a deep debt of gratitude to the contributors to this collection who labored through several revisions of their original papers as well as to the anonymous reviewers of the manuscript whose suggestions for revisions greatly strengthened the final product. The editors also thank Sefira Falcoff, assistant director of CIPR, and Ezra Spira-Cohen, PhD candidate in political science at Tulane University, for their assistance in preparing the manuscript for publication. Federico would like to thank Donatella della Porta (Scuola Normale Superiore), Sid Tarrow (Cornell University), Jeff Goodwin (New York University), and Philippe Schmitter (European University Institute) for believing that it was worth mentoring and supporting his endeavors for over a decade. Eduardo would like to give a special acknowledgment to Christopher Mitchell (New York University) for encouraging him to take up an academic career. Paul Drake (University of California, San Diego) is a mentor, colleague, and friend who taught him the basics—as well as the finer points—of just about everything in the profession.