Geraldine Lievesley
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The politics of the poor
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This chapter focuses upon women's mobilization - to define and evaluate the nature of these movements, as well as to determine how they are to be regarded from the perspective of the liberal pacted and radical participatory models of democratic consolidation and empowerment. There had been a long history in Chile of partisan intervention in grassroots politics. A highly politicized political culture centred upon political parties and those of both Right and Left sought to manipulate popular organizations. Typically, clientelists tended to look upwards, acknowledging the power of their 'betters', whereas radicals were more confrontational, conscious of themselves as poor, and dominant politics as inhabited by the wealthy. They were also aware of the state as the site of struggle and of the relationship between local conflicts and national power relations. This awareness stimulated a fresh perception of how they could engage in political and social change.

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Democracy in Latin America

Mobilization, power and the search for a new politics

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