Policy regime shift through popular societal resistance in developing countries, advocating a state-regulated economic model, has been a frequent occurrence in the 21st century, during a period where neoliberalism has dominated the world market. Scholars have brought up the framework of double movement to explain these social, economic, and political changes from free-market regimes to state-controlled regimes, claiming that it is a societal reaction to the commodification of land, labor, and money. This research poses the question of how political change can be interpreted through the lens of the concept of double movement even though a government can show positive social and economic development records, where a left-wing state-regulated ...
Development cooperation between the “New Left” governments in Latin America and the World Bank shows...
Throughout Latin America the conservative terms established at the outset of democratization, which ...
This paper offers a neo-Gramscian examination of the causes and processes underlying social restruct...
Providing us with a historicisation and contextualization of Bolivia’s development of an alternative...
There is a widespread understanding in critical scholarly literature that the government of Evo Mora...
The article explores how solidarity and political emancipation progressed and impacted resistance ag...
In April of 2000, in the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia, mass protests over the privatization of water ...
This paper will look into some structural features of the Bolivian state-society complex, highlighti...
The 2005 election of Evo Morales as the president of Bolivia marked a moment of celebration for the ...
Many Latin American countries which underwent democratic regime transformations within the last thir...
In Bolivia from the 1990s on, two presidents were ousted by popular protests, and protests were ramp...
This thesis examines the establishment of plurinationalism in Bolivia and its relationship with a re...
With the ebbing of the pink tide, the MAS government in Bolivia remains as one of the most successfu...
The article focuses on the relation between indigenous social movements’ struggle for establishment ...
This article aims to analyze and contextualize the allegedly deteriorated relationship between the s...
Development cooperation between the “New Left” governments in Latin America and the World Bank shows...
Throughout Latin America the conservative terms established at the outset of democratization, which ...
This paper offers a neo-Gramscian examination of the causes and processes underlying social restruct...
Providing us with a historicisation and contextualization of Bolivia’s development of an alternative...
There is a widespread understanding in critical scholarly literature that the government of Evo Mora...
The article explores how solidarity and political emancipation progressed and impacted resistance ag...
In April of 2000, in the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia, mass protests over the privatization of water ...
This paper will look into some structural features of the Bolivian state-society complex, highlighti...
The 2005 election of Evo Morales as the president of Bolivia marked a moment of celebration for the ...
Many Latin American countries which underwent democratic regime transformations within the last thir...
In Bolivia from the 1990s on, two presidents were ousted by popular protests, and protests were ramp...
This thesis examines the establishment of plurinationalism in Bolivia and its relationship with a re...
With the ebbing of the pink tide, the MAS government in Bolivia remains as one of the most successfu...
The article focuses on the relation between indigenous social movements’ struggle for establishment ...
This article aims to analyze and contextualize the allegedly deteriorated relationship between the s...
Development cooperation between the “New Left” governments in Latin America and the World Bank shows...
Throughout Latin America the conservative terms established at the outset of democratization, which ...
This paper offers a neo-Gramscian examination of the causes and processes underlying social restruct...