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Democracias andinas : chegando tarde à festa?

By: COUTINHO, Marcelo.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: Rio de Janeiro : IUPERJ, Out./Dez. 2006Dados : revista de ciências sociais 49, 4, p. 795-832Abstract: After a centuries-old history of oligarchic, populist, and authoritarian institutionality, in recent decades South America has begun the transition to a liberal democratic state model. This new state model harbors the contradiction of being both more democratic and less capable. Namely, it allows public participation and dissent, but with more limited conditions to respond, a role that has been largely transferred to the market, which has become globalized and more complex, while experiencing difficulties in meeting social demands. The tension between democracy and economic limitations, combined with endogenous institutional problems, has sustained a climate of permanent political instability in parts of South America, reproducing fragmentations and conflicts, which are the focus of this study, a comparative analysis of five Andean countries: Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela
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After a centuries-old history of oligarchic, populist, and authoritarian institutionality, in recent decades South America has begun the transition to a liberal democratic state model. This new state model harbors the contradiction of being both more democratic and less capable. Namely, it allows public participation and dissent, but with more limited conditions to respond, a role that has been largely transferred to the market, which has become globalized and more complex, while experiencing difficulties in meeting social demands. The tension between democracy and economic limitations, combined with endogenous institutional problems, has sustained a climate of permanent political instability in parts of South America, reproducing fragmentations and conflicts, which are the focus of this study, a comparative analysis of five Andean countries: Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela

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