In thematic terms, this book seeks to promote vital debate on the interactions between economic, political, and social processes. Latin American Political Economy publishes new, relevant, and empirically grounded scholarship that deepens our understanding of contemporary Latin American political economy and contributes to the formulation and evaluation of new theories that are both context-sensitive and subject to broader comparisons. Inspired by the need to provide new analytical perspectives for understanding the massive social, political, and economic transformations underway in Latin America, the series is directed at researchers and practitioners interested in resurrecting political economy as a primary research area in the developing world. It is especially concerned with how findings may further our understanding of development models, the socio-political institutions that sustain them, and the practical problems they confront.
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1. Summary of conflict 2009-2020.
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2. Social outburst in Chile.
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3. Labor conflicts.-Chapter
4. The pension system conflict.
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5. Education protests.
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6. Socioenvironmental conflicts.
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7. The Mapuche conflict.
Chapter 8: The feminist protest.
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9. The conflicts of memory.
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10. Violence and conflicts.
Alfredo Joignant (Ph.D. in Political Science, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France) is a full professor in political science at the School of Political Science, Universidad Diego Portales, and principal investigator at the Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies (COES). He is a past president of the Chilean Political Science Association. His research has appeared in journals such as Democratization, Sociological Perspectives, Sociology Compass, Memory Studies, Journal of Latin American Studies, Cahiers internationaux de sociologie, and Revue française de science politique, among others. His last book was Acting Politics. A Critical Sociology of the Political Field (Routledge, 2019). He is currently studying the role of public intellectuals in transnational fields and circuits and the transformations of modern capitalism.
Nicolás M. Somma (Ph.D. in Sociology, University of Notre Dame, Indiana) is an associate professor and former chair of the Instituto de Sociología, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, and associate researcher at the Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies (COES, Chile). He teaches and does research on political sociology, social movements, and historical-comparative sociology. He has published in journals such as Party Politics, Social Movement Studies, American Behavioral Scientist, Latin American Politics and Society, and Comparative Politics, among many others. He is completing a mixed-methods project on labor movements in Latin America, and beginning a study of popular rebellions in the same region since 1989.