Kalman Silvert Award 2022:
Ronald H. Chilcote
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5 days ago
Open access articles available!
Our January issue, “The Agrarian Question as an Ecological Question,” analyzes the intersections of agriculture, environment, and social justice.
Two articles are available with Open Access via Sage Journals - Latin American Perspectives! journals.sagepub.com/toc/lapa/51/1
#Latinamericanperspectives #Openaccess #Environmentalstudies ... See MoreSee Less
5 days ago
🇨🇺 New Podcast! 🇨🇺
Historian and friend of the pod @jo.salemvasconcelos joins us to discuss her incredible book 'Agrarian History of the Cuban Revolution: Dilemmas of Peripheral Socialism.' Translated from Portuguese and originally published in Brazil in 2016, this meticulously researched text unpacks the complicated political and economic challenges Cuba has faced since its 1959 revolution, demonstrating why the sugar plantation economic structure has persisted. For those interested in Cuba, the Cold War, and the political economy of agrarian reform in Latin America, it is an absolute most read! sites.libsyn.com/456621/latinamericanperspectives/editors-choice-ep-8-agrarian-history-of-the-cub...
Joana Salém Vasconcelos is a full-time Visiting Professor at Federal University of ABC (UFABC), Brazil, and has a PhD in Economic History from the University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil.
Agrarian History of the Cuban Revolution: Dilemmas of Peripheral Socialism is available for purchase through Haymarket Books ... See MoreSee Less
2 months ago
Check out Professor Armando Boito’s insightful take on populism in Brazil 🇧🇷
In this clip from LAP’s newest episode, Boito asserts his perspectives on populism.
The full episode is available on YouTube (with English subtitles) and Spotify. 🎧 ... See MoreSee Less
2 months ago
Novo episĂłdio de podcast! Dando inĂcio Ă Segunda temporada do LAP Editor’s Choice, nos juntamos ao renomado cientista polĂtico marxista e teĂłrico Armando Boito para discutir seu recĂ©m-lançado livro "Reform and Political Crisis in Brazil: Class Conflicts in Workers' Party Governments and the Rise of Bolsonaro Neo-fascism" (disponĂvel em inglĂŞs).
O livro examina o processo polĂtico brasileiro entre os anos de 2003 e 2020, focando nos governos do Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), suas polĂticas reformistas, a crise polĂtica que levou ao impeachment da presidente Dilma Rousseff, e a ascensĂŁo do neofascismo com Bolsonaro. Com base em uma estrutura teĂłrica marxista, Boito argumenta que conflitos ideolĂłgicos e partidários estĂŁo intimamente ligados aos conflitos distributivos baseados em classe social dentro da sociedade brasileira em geral. Portanto, apĂłs a quarta derrota consecutiva nas eleições presidenciais, partidos polĂticos representando o capital internacional, segmentos da burguesia e a classe mĂ©dia abandonaram normas democráticas com o objetivo de acabar com o ciclo de governança do PT, pavimentando o caminho para a ascensĂŁo do neofascismo.
Armando Boito Ă© professor de CiĂŞncias PolĂticas na Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), Brasil, e editor do jornal CrĂtica Marxista.
"Reform and Political Crisis in Brazil" pode ser comprado online através do site @haymarketbooks ... See MoreSee Less
2 months ago
The controversy over the July 28 elections in Venezuela shouldn’t overshadow the gains that were made under Chávez. Rebelion.org just posted this article on the lessons and the legacy of the Chávez presidency.
rebelion.org/el-legado-de-hugo-chavez-mantener-el-impulso-revolucionario/ ... See MoreSee Less
El legado de Hugo Chávez – Rebelion
Mantener el impulso revolucion...LATIN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES
MISSION:Â To encourage class analysis of sociocultural realities and political strategies to transform Latin American sociopolitical structures. We make a conscious effort to publish a diversity of political viewpoints.
Political Report #1463 – Venezuela’s November Elections: Washington’s New Strategy but Same Old Assumptions
by Steve EllnerPosted by Venezuelanalysis.com It seems just yesterday that Eliot Abrams declared the Trump administration was "working hard" to [...]
Latin American Extractivism Dependency, Resource Nationalism, and Resistance in Broad Perspective
Edited by Steve Ellner A review by Angelo Rivero Santos | NACLAfrom our LAP Classroom Series On September [...]
Refugees, Indigenous People, Transgenders and Prisoners : Latin American Governments’ Miscommunication with the Most Vulnerable Communities During COVID- 19
By Marcelo Rodriguez and Victoria De La Torre | October 13, 2020 In times of a pandemic, vital information becomes a [...]
A AMAZÔNIA ARRASADA ENFRENTA O COVID-19
 Por Mônica Dias Martins e Bernardo Mançano Fernandes | October 12, 2020 Durante a pandemia que assola o [...]
- LAP Journals (six per year) are grouped below in a slider (click arrows).
- For more information, to view contents or to purchase an issue – click on the journal.
- To view or purchase from the entire collection from 2007 – CLICK HERE.
NEW ISSUE
The Agrarian Question as an Ecological Question in Latin America
Issue Editors:
Daniela GarcĂa Grandon
Andrew Smolski
Jan. 2024
Historically, the agrarian question in Latin America was primarily concerned with addressing the unequal distribution of land and rural poverty through redistribution. Different types of agrarian reform policies in the twentieth century, frequently with different goals, tried to dismantle large estates owned by a few wealthy elites and allocate the land among landless peasants, small-scale farmers, or Indigenous communities.
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PODCASTS
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Current LAP issues contain thirty-three (37) open access articles. Â
1. Verónica Silva “A New dawn or a False Hope for Mexico’s Left: Overcoming Neoliberal Legacies in an Uncertain World.” March 2023 VIEW ISSUE
2. Richard Coughlin, “The Fourth Transformation and the Trajectory of Neoliberalism in Mexico.” March 2023 VIEW ISSUE
3. Alessandro Morosin, The State, Accumulation, and Oaxaca’s Earthquake Survivors: Three Mechanisms of Inequality.” March 2023 VIEW ISSUE
4. Steve Ellner, “Left Government Strategies toward Business Groups and the Outcomes: The Mexican and Venezuelan Cases.” March 2023 VIEW ISSUE
5. Felipe Antunes de Oliveira, “Lost and Found: Bourgeois Dependency Theory and the Forgotten Roots of Neodevelopmentalism.” January 2022 VIEW ISSUE
6. Parisa Nourani Rinaldi, “The Age of Transition: Postdevelopment and North-Sough Synergies. January 2022 issue. VIEW ISSUE
7. Alfredo Saad-Filho, Juan Grigera, Ana Paula Colombi, “Introduction: The Nature of the PT Governments: A Variety of Neoliberalism?” January 2020 issue. VIEW ISSUE
8. Alfredo Saad-Filho, “Varieties of Neoliberalism in Brazil (2003-2019). January 2020 issue VIEW ISSUEÂ
9. Luiz Filgueiras, “The Governments of the Workers’ Party: Capitalist Development Pattern and Macroeconomic Policy Regimes.” January 2020 issue. VIEW ISSUEÂ
10. Daniela MagalhĂŁes Prates, Barbara Fritz and Luiz Fernando de Paula, Varieties of Developmentalism: A Critical Assessment of the PT Governments.” January 2020Â
VIEW ISSUE
11. Pedro Cezar Dutra Fonseca, Marcelo Arend and Glaison Augusto Guerrero, “Growth, Distribution and Crisis: The Workers’ Party Administration.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUEÂ
12. Gustavo Codas Friedmann and Claudio A. Castelo Branco Puty, “Sailing against the Wind: The Rise and Crisis of a Low-Conflict Progressivism.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUE Â
13. Pedro Rossi, Guilherme Mello and Pedro Paulo Zahluth Bastos, “The Growth Model of the PT Governments: A Furtadian View of the Limits of Recent Brazilian Development.” January 2020  VIEW ISSUEÂ
14. Adalmir Antonio Marquetti, Cecilia Hoff and Alessandro Miebach, “Profitability and Distribution: The Origin of the Brazilian Economic and Political Crisis.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUE
15. Armando Boito, “Lulism, Populism, and Bonapartism.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUEÂ
16. AndrĂ© Singer, “The Failure of Dilma Rousseff’s Developmentalist Experiment: A Class Analysis.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUE Â
17. Ruy Braga and Fábio Luis Barbosa dos Santos, “The Political Economy of Lulism and Its Aftermath.” January 2020 VIEW ISSUEÂ
18. Sandy Smith-Nonini “The Debt/Energy Nexus behind Puerto Rico’s Long Blackout: From Fossil Colonialism to New Energy Poverty. May 2020 VIEW ISSUE
19. Hannes Warnecke-Berger, “Remittances, the Rescaling of Social Conflicts, and the Stasis of Elite Rule in El Salvador.” VIEW ISSUEÂ
20. Steve Ellner, “Pink-Tide Governments: Pragmatic and Populist Responses to Challenges from the Right.” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
21. Megan Pickup “The Political Economy of the New Left.” January 2019  VIEW ISSUE
22. Marcel Nelson, “Walking the Tightrope of Socialist Governance: A Strategic-Relational Analysis of Twenty-first-Century Socialism,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
23. Pedro Mendes Loureiro and Alfredo Saad-Filho, “The Limits of Pragmatism: The Rise and Fall of the Brazilian Workers’ Party (2002–2016).” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
24. Ricardo Antunes, Marco Aurelio Santana and Luci Praun, “Chronicle of a Defeat Foretold: The PT Administrations from Compromise to the Coup,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
25. Mariano FĂ©liz, “Neodevelopmentalism and Dependency in Twenty-first-Century Argentina: Insights from the Work of Ruy Mauro Marini,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
26. Gabriel Oyhantçabal, “The Political Economy of Progressive Uruguay, 2005–2016,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
27. Nicolás Bentancur and JosĂ© Miguel Busquets, “The Governing Left in Uruguay (2005–2015): A Participatory Democratic Experiment,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
28. Florencia AntĂa, “The Political Dynamic of Redistribution in Unequal Democracies: The Center-Left Governments of Chile and Uruguay in Comparative Perspective,” January 2019 article. VIEW ISSUE Â
29. Steve Ellner, “Class Strategies in Chavista Venezuela: Pragmatic and Populist Policies in a Broader Context,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
30. Luis Fernando Angosto-Ferrández, “Neoextractivism and Class Formation: Lessons from the Orinoco Mining Arc Project in Venezuela,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
31. Linda Farthing, “An Opportunity Squandered? Elites, Social Movements, and the Government of Evo Morales,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
32. Patrick Clark and Jacobo GarcĂa, “Left Populism, State Building, Class Compromise, and Social Conflict in Ecuador’s Citizens’ Revolution,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUE Â
33. HĂ©ctor Cruz Feliciano, “The Perils of Reconciliation: Achievements and Challenges of Daniel Ortega and the Modern FSLN,” January 2019. VIEW ISSUEÂ
34. Paul Dosh and Julia Smith Coyoli, “Lessons from the Left in Lima: Susana Villarán and the Fleeting Return of Progressive Politics to City Hal,” January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
35. Steve Ellner, “Different Perspectives on Twenty-first-Century Latin America,” book review of Tulia G. Falleti and Emilio A. Parrado (eds.) Latin America since the Left Turn. January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
36. Steve Ellner “Reflections on the Application of Democratic Theory to Latin America” book review of Joe Foweraker, Polity: Demystifying Democracy in Latin America and Beyond. January 2019 VIEW ISSUEÂ
37. Emelio Betances, “In Search of the Subject of Change,” book review of Carlos Julio Báez Evertsz, Desigualdad y clases sociales. VIEW ISSUE