Geraldine Lievesley
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The political power of women
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This chapter assesses how women organize in order to repudiate this marginalization. This necessitates considering the relationship women have with the state and other institutions, discussing what democratic forms most promote women's presence in public life, and evaluating the different strategies women pursue. It will also involve a consideration of how women, differentiated by class, ethnicity, wealth, education and political experience, relate to each other. By not being linked consistently with other demands and actions in the public sphere, the political dimension of everyday life remained separate from local and municipal politics further accentuating false dichotomies: political power is man's discourse and the domestic sphere and the quality of life is women's concern. The evidence offered in this chapter demonstrates the breadth and diversity of women's political activity, be it based in popular mobilization, incursions into the official male world of party and governmental politics, or feminism.

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Democracy in Latin America

Mobilization, power and the search for a new politics

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