170 likes | 311 Views
Emergence and Expansion. LATIN AmERICAn POLITICS : Interest GROUPS. Political Development and the Appearance of Interest Groups. Structural differentiation Cultural secularization Sub-system autonomy. Requisites for Becoming a “PLAYER”. Demonstrate that you have power
E N D
Emergence and Expansion LATIN AmERICAn POLITICS : Interest GROUPS
Political Development and the Appearance of Interest Groups • Structural differentiation • Cultural secularization • Sub-system autonomy
Requisites for Becoming a “PLAYER” • Demonstrate that you have power • Will respect the rights of already existent players • Leads to a “living museum” approach since traditional groups not destroyed • Unwillingness to be co-opted leads to being repressed
Repression of Would-be “PLAYERS” • Repression usually successful – for a time • Repressed groups often resurface in a revolutionary mode • Peasants in Cuba • Industrial workers in Peron’s Argentina • Urban poor in Chavez’s Venezuela
Ruling Triumvirate: Nineteenth Century (MILITARY) • Tradition of caudillismo • General themes • Assorted armies become active in politics • National militaries often play a “moderating” role • Struggle for professionalism • “New” professionalism
Ruling Triumvirate: Colonial Period (ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH) • Feudal. Catholicism • Amerindians Conversion to Protectionism • Protection of the Amerindians • Mixing of Catholic and Native traditions • Silence on Africans and slavery • Anti-clerical revolutions of post-independence period
Ruling Triumvirate: Nineteenth Century (ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH II) • Nation state monopolizes record keeping and social services • Late in the century: Priests return as teachers of the ruling national elite • Following Independence: Convents and Monasteries abandoned or destroyed
Ruling Triumvirate: Nineteenth Century (Large Land Owners) • Control over large land owners during the colonial period • Crown • Church largest landowner • Land Owning elite and the immediate post independence period • Raiding of communal properties held by Amerindians • Nationalization of ecclesiastical properties
Ruling Triumvirate: Late Nineteenth Century (Large Land Owners) Investment from the North Atlantic funds the emergence of commercial plantation agriculture • Wheat and cattle in Argentina • Coffee in Brazil • Mining in Mexico • Bananas in Central America • Consolidation of commercial agriculture locks in place an exploited peasant class
Expansion of the Triumvirate: Entrepreneurs • Initially merchants to market agricultural produce • Merchants usually related by blood to rural elite • Industrialists first appear in the Southern Cone • Industry also emerges in Sao Paulo (Brazil) • Strong immigrant presence • Conflict marks the relationship between merchants industrialists
Expansion of the Triumvirate: Middle Sectors & Professionals • Initially confined to capital cities • Provided services for the elite • Professional middle sectors tied to modernization and industrialization • Scottish engineers • Immigrants in Brazil and the Southern cone • Minimal political influence
Expansion of the Triumvirate: Peasants • Elite apprehension leads to violence and annihilation of autonomous peasants: Brazil (Os Sertoes) • Struggle between elites opens the way for first great peasant revolt: Mexico • Political Parties (led by middle class) organize the peasants • Peru – APRA • Guatemala – Juan Jose Arevalo • Venezuela – Democratic Action
Expansion of the Triumvirate: Industrial Workers • Initially small in numbers and lacking in influence • Numbers swell with the growth of the cities • Juan Peron & Evita: first use of urban poor in national power equation • Peru: Manuel Odrilla & authoritarian populism
Expansion of the Triumvirate: Urban Poor • City-ward Migration • Appearance of the urban poor in national politics • Venezuela: Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution • Mexico: Lopez Obredor • Shantytowns of Caracas
Mobilization of Women • Eva Peron organizes women as a political group (1940’s) • Right to vote widespread following World War II
Capability of Liberal Democratic Political Regimes in Latin American to process demands from the newly diverse constellation of interest groups may be inadequate