Weberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. Theoretically, the major works in the area suffer from a conflation of liberalism and democracy and offer flawed conceptions of capitalism, class, and other social relations of oppression. This article offers an exegesis and critique of several recent influential texts written within the Weberian tradition. It then proposes as an alternative a Marxian-decolonial theoretical framework for understanding inequality and the totalizing power of capital. It demonstrates how such a framework can better account for the complexity of class relations and other internally related forms of social oppression—such as gender, sexuality, and race—in Latin Ameri...
Through a relational class perspective, this dissertation compares the evolution of the development ...
Latin American women are on the move today, taking their demands to the streets throughout the regio...
The paper analyses the evolution of inequality for the largest economies of the Latin American regio...
In this penetrating volume, Jeffery Webber charts the political dynamics and conflicts underpinning ...
It is far from obvious which theories are the most promising ones for the task of critically address...
This paper aims to research whether the varieties of capitalism impact the relationship between soci...
Latin America is a highly volatile region. After it was exposed to the rigours of colonialism, it ha...
In this article, we show the evolution of inequality for the largest economies of the Latin American...
This edited volume examines how economic processes have worked upon social lives and social realitie...
In the global contemporary political context, diverse social struggles are being alienated from each...
The global transformations that enveloped Latin America over the past decade resulted in uneven cons...
The present paper draws on works that combine Marxist and Weberian traditions of social structure an...
This article analyzes the legal and sociological aspects of the social phenomenon of labor relations...
Neoliberalism, Interrupted presents Latin America as a global laboratory for new forms of governance...
In recent years, a dense and fruitful debate on the history of inequality in Latin America has devel...
Through a relational class perspective, this dissertation compares the evolution of the development ...
Latin American women are on the move today, taking their demands to the streets throughout the regio...
The paper analyses the evolution of inequality for the largest economies of the Latin American regio...
In this penetrating volume, Jeffery Webber charts the political dynamics and conflicts underpinning ...
It is far from obvious which theories are the most promising ones for the task of critically address...
This paper aims to research whether the varieties of capitalism impact the relationship between soci...
Latin America is a highly volatile region. After it was exposed to the rigours of colonialism, it ha...
In this article, we show the evolution of inequality for the largest economies of the Latin American...
This edited volume examines how economic processes have worked upon social lives and social realitie...
In the global contemporary political context, diverse social struggles are being alienated from each...
The global transformations that enveloped Latin America over the past decade resulted in uneven cons...
The present paper draws on works that combine Marxist and Weberian traditions of social structure an...
This article analyzes the legal and sociological aspects of the social phenomenon of labor relations...
Neoliberalism, Interrupted presents Latin America as a global laboratory for new forms of governance...
In recent years, a dense and fruitful debate on the history of inequality in Latin America has devel...
Through a relational class perspective, this dissertation compares the evolution of the development ...
Latin American women are on the move today, taking their demands to the streets throughout the regio...
The paper analyses the evolution of inequality for the largest economies of the Latin American regio...