Article(electronic)March 1, 2006

Soziale Bewegungen in Lateinamerika: Eine historische Bilanz

In: Prokla: Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft, Volume 36, Issue 142, p. 7-22

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Abstract

At the beginning of the 20th century, social movements in Latin America were heavily influenced by anarchist immigrants from Europe and then by the ideological struggles around the Russian revolution. Beginning in the 1930s, many social movements started to incorporate into leftwing and populist parties and governments, such as the Cardenismo in Mexico. Facing the shift of many governments towards the left and the 'threat' of socialist Cuba, ultrarightwing groups and the military, supported by the US, responded in many countries with brutal repression and opened the neoliberal era. Today, after 30 years of repression and neoliberal hegemony, the social movements are gaining strength again in many Latin American countries. With the anti-globalization movement, new insurrections like the Zapatismo in Mexico, and some leftwing governments coming into power in Venezuela, Brasil and other countries, there appears to be a new turn in Latin America's road to the future.

Publisher

Vereinigung zur Kritik der politischen Okonomie e.V.

ISSN: 2700-0311

DOI

10.32387/prokla.v36i142.566

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