Populism in Venezuela

Author(s)

    • Brading, Ryan

Bibliographic Information

Populism in Venezuela

Ryan Brading

(Routledge studies in Latin American politics, 4)

Routledge, 2013

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [197]-202) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Populism in Venezuela analyses the emergence, formation, reproduction and resistance to a left-wing populist project in a major world oil producer. For readers who seek to understand the historical, economical and sociological contexts that gave rise to a 38 year-old mestizo-mulato Lieutenant Colonel who stormed the presidential palace in a bloody coup d'etat in 1992, subsequently returned to the same palace in 1998, but this time, as a democratically elected President, and has been in power since, this book is the right place to start. In spite of opposition attempts to oust President Hugo Chavez and his political machinery from power, this 'socialism of the twenty-first century' hegemonic project has succeeded in creating an institutional structure designed to improve the lives of the previously excluded population. An in-depth fieldwork study of a Cuban healthcare programme named Barrio Adentro (deep in the slums) in Venezuela's poor and rural areas, and the nonviolence Manos Blancas (white hands) opposition student movement - provides a descriptive and analytical account of people's problems from both sides in a deeply polarised society. The concluding chapter of this book examines Chavez's intention to stay in power until 2031. An original resource for scholars, students and general readers; this book not only furthers our understanding populism in Venezuela but also provides a sound method to analyse populist practices in other contexts.

Table of Contents

Introduction. 1. Populism, Theories, and Logics: A Theoretical and Methodological Approach. 2. The Venezuelan State: Its Formation, Consolidation and Decline. 3. The Process of Deinstitutionalizing the Power Structure and Institutionalizing Venezuela's Bolivarian Project. 4. A Healthcare Program in Excluded Areas: A Community Participative Model Constructs Healthcare with Cuban Medics in Venezuela. 5. The Anti-Bolivarian Student Movement: New Social Actors Challenge the Advancement of Venezuela's Bolivarian Radicalism 6. Indefinite Re-election, Gerrymandering, Chavez's Cancer, Grand Missions and a United Opposition Force. Conclusion.

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