Through a relational class perspective, this dissertation compares the evolution of the development models in Venezuela and Ecuador since the 1970s to better understand the significance of the recent turn to the left. Based on field research in both countries comprising extensive interviews with representatives of social movements and business interest groups, it studies the main class organizations, their struggles, and their relation with the state in order to shed light on the dynamics of change in the development models pursued in each country, and the role that extractive rent plays within them. While governments associated with the pink tide in Venezuela and Ecuador were not elected under similar economic contexts, they faced compar...
This paper explores the relationship between ground rent, production and knowledge in Ecuador’s neo-...
I explore the relationship between Ecuador’s purported disengagement with neoliberalism in 2008, and...
Over the last thirty-five years the Peruvian socialist Left has not been able to gain state power. T...
For the Latin American Left the road to ruin, or at least setback, was broadly similar across the re...
This thesis explores the contemporary mass social and political process in Venezuela referred to as ...
This dissertation focuses on how the interaction of political, economic and social factors shape the...
The ‘new’ extractivism is a ‘new’ scramble in resource rich regions that refers to the rise in expor...
This dissertation examines the symbolic and material dimensions of media power and social movement c...
This dissertation explores the experiences of an indigenous community from the Northern Ecuadorian A...
Ph.D. University of Kansas, Sociology 1989This dissertation examines the organization of an unpreced...
In a historic shift, protest and policymaking in Ecuador now centers on the very desirability of res...
Weberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. The...
This paper explores the contradictions and limits to agrarian transformation under twenty-first Cent...
This dissertation provides a reinterpretation of Chilean history via an analysis of the processes of...
Why did land reforms attempted in 1936, 1961 and 1994 not lead to more equality, stability, and peac...
This paper explores the relationship between ground rent, production and knowledge in Ecuador’s neo-...
I explore the relationship between Ecuador’s purported disengagement with neoliberalism in 2008, and...
Over the last thirty-five years the Peruvian socialist Left has not been able to gain state power. T...
For the Latin American Left the road to ruin, or at least setback, was broadly similar across the re...
This thesis explores the contemporary mass social and political process in Venezuela referred to as ...
This dissertation focuses on how the interaction of political, economic and social factors shape the...
The ‘new’ extractivism is a ‘new’ scramble in resource rich regions that refers to the rise in expor...
This dissertation examines the symbolic and material dimensions of media power and social movement c...
This dissertation explores the experiences of an indigenous community from the Northern Ecuadorian A...
Ph.D. University of Kansas, Sociology 1989This dissertation examines the organization of an unpreced...
In a historic shift, protest and policymaking in Ecuador now centers on the very desirability of res...
Weberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. The...
This paper explores the contradictions and limits to agrarian transformation under twenty-first Cent...
This dissertation provides a reinterpretation of Chilean history via an analysis of the processes of...
Why did land reforms attempted in 1936, 1961 and 1994 not lead to more equality, stability, and peac...
This paper explores the relationship between ground rent, production and knowledge in Ecuador’s neo-...
I explore the relationship between Ecuador’s purported disengagement with neoliberalism in 2008, and...
Over the last thirty-five years the Peruvian socialist Left has not been able to gain state power. T...