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The Limits to Citizen Power

The Limits to Citizen Power

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Can a political project exist outside of the power relations from which it is trying to emerge? In the twilight of Brazil’s twenty-one year military regime, a new union movement emerged in São Paulo’s industrial region, giving life to a new political party: the Workers’ Party. The electoral success enjoyed by the party enabled it to champion a whole raft of democratic reforms. Drawing on long-term ethnographic research, Victor Albert provides a critical analysis of citizen participation in Santo André, in the region of Greater São Paulo where the Workers’ Party was founded, holding a microscope to the power relations between political appointees, public officials and local community activists. Albert also reveals how different social actors think and feel about citizen participation away from formal assemblies, and how some participants engage in what is a tenuous, and at times mutually distrustful, tactical and strategic relationship with political patrons.
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Keywords

  • anthropology
  • Brazil
  • Democracy
  • Development Studies
  • KUnlatched
  • Latin America
  • Political Ideologies
  • Political Science
  • Political Science / Political Ideologies / Democracy
  • Political structure & processes
  • Political structures: democracy
  • Politics & government
  • Society & Social Sciences
  • Workers' Party

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