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Affective polarization in Latin America: A research note Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-12-10 Marcelo Bergman, Pablo Fernández
Affective polarization (AP), a concept that summarizes intense partisans’ animosity towards opposing parties and positive feelings towards their own, has recently received increasing attention. Despite a growing interest in Latin American polarization, there are very few empirical studies on the range and depth of dislike and distrust towards political adversaries in the region, and how this impacts
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Changing Urban Movements Repertoires Following the Erosion of Porto Alegre’s Participatory Budgeting: From Institutionalized Participation to Deinstitutionalization Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-12-02 Jonas Lefebvre
In Brazil, numerous participatory institutions have been suspended over the past decades, including many participatory budgeting (PB) programs at the municipal level. Since the introduction of PB in Porto Alegre in 1989, extensive literature has discussed its effects on the way urban social movements make demands. However, the suspension of many PBs across Brazil raises a new question: how do these
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Unpacking Bribery: Petty Corruption and Favor Exchanges Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-27 Diego Romero
The incidence of petty corruption in public service delivery varies greatly across citizens and geography. This paper proposes a novel explanation for citizen engagement in collusive forms of petty corruption. It is rooted in the social context in which citizen-public official interactions take place. I argue that social proximity and network centrality provide the two key enforcement mechanisms that
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Fairweather Cosmopolitans: Immigration Attitudes in Latin America During the Migrant Crisis Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-11 Brett R. Bessen, Brendan J. Connell, Ken Stallman
What explains voter attitudes toward immigration in Latin America? This article argues that increased refugee arrivals moderate the impact of social identities on immigration attitudes. We propose that informational cues associated with increased immigration make cosmopolitan identities less important—and exclusionary national identities more important—determinants of immigration preferences. Analyzing
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When Resisting Is Not Enough: The killing of Latin American Feminist Activists (2015–23) Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-11 Simone da Silva Ribeiro Gomes
The article analyses an original database of 177 Latin American women activists killed that had some connection with feminist social movements from 2015 to 2023. A growing body of literature has focused on the killings of socio-environmental activists in Latin America and where they occurred. However, their activisms are under-researched, precisely because feminist social movements and activists have
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A Unified Canon? Latin American Graduate Training in Comparative Politics Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-06 Nicolás Taccone, Inés Fynn, Ignacio Borba
In Latin American comparative politics, a tension exists between North Americanization and parochialism. While certain academic scholarship is published in Scopus-indexed journals that engage with “mainstream” Global North literature, other works are found in non-indexed outlets, focusing solely on their home countries and fostering parochial scientific communities. To assess this tension in graduate
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Conceptualizing Mano Dura in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-10-15 Sebastian Cutrona, Lucia Dammert, Jonathan D. Rosen
Latin American governments are increasingly adopting mano dura initiatives to combat gangs, organized crime, and insecurity. While mano dura has been a concept of increasing empirical interest, there seems to be limited conceptual clarity about the wide spectrum of strategies developed to combat crime and associated fear. This article proposes a definition of mano dura that has three different dimensions
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Government formation in presidentialism: Disentangling the combined effects of pre-electoral coalitions and legislative polarization Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Lucas Couto
Recent research has shed light on the impact of pre-electoral coalitions on government formation in presidential democracies. However, the fact that pre-electoral coalitions are not automatically transformed into coalition cabinets has often gone under the radar. In this article, I argue that the importance of pre-electoral pacts for government formation depends on the degree of legislative polarization
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Participatory clientelism: A socio-spatial approach to popular politics in Buenos Aires Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Sam Halvorsen, Sebastián Mauro
What is the relationship between clientelism and political participation in popular urban neighborhoods? This article addresses the question based on qualitative research in two popular neighborhoods of Buenos Aires, drawing on participant observation and interviews with residents, activists, and party brokers. Adding to a growing literature on “participatory clientelism,” we argue for greater attention
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Race, Inequality, and Political Trust in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Castellar Granados, Francisco Sánchez
During the last decades, political distrust has seemingly become a common trend across Latin American democracies, however, differences in the levels of confidence among groups have also been identified. This article considers the potential effects of ethno-racial structures and their interactions with other forms of socioeconomic inequalities on political trust. Building on data from four waves of
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The Unbearable Uncertainty of Being on the Front Street-level Military in the Mexican War on Drugs Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Alejandro Pocoroba, Laura H. Atuesta, Javier Treviño-Rangel
Since the so-called war on drugs began in Mexico in 2006, the military has been the leading actor in charge of the government’s public security policy, undertaking tasks that should be carried out by the police. Analyses of this security strategy are based on quantitative methods and have focused on its results: e.g., an increase in the homicide rate or the committing of human rights violations. In
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Media Credibility and Voter Penalization of Corrupt Politicians in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Carmen van Klaveren, Syed Mansoob Murshed, Elissaios Papyrakis
There has been a significant growth of social media as a means to inform oneself about politics. This article explores the consequences of this trend on the credibility audiences attribute to news exposing corrupt politicians and on their willingness to penalize the exposed politicians in elections. The study focuses on ten Latin American cities and employs a randomized control trial using experimental
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Recent Trends in Mass-Level Ideological Polarization in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Paolo Moncagatta, Pedro Silva
This article offers an analysis of the changes in mass-level ideological polarization in Latin America. It provides a cross-national, region-wide assessment of polarization dynamics using survey data on left-right ideological identities. A novel indicator for measuring ideological polarization at the individual level is proposed, which is more compatible with theoretical conceptualizations of ideological
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Disjointed Polarization in Chile’s Enduring Crisis of Representation Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Juan Pablo Luna
This analytical essay proposes the notion of disjointed polarization to characterize the nature of polarization in contemporary Chile. In disjointed polarization, elite-level polarization does not lead to a successful electoral realignment. Disjointed polarization is thus consistent with a long-lasting crisis of representation in which a serial disconnect between politicians (pursuing different polarizing
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Tweeting Antagonism: (De)Polarizing Rhetoric and Tone in Colombia’s 2022 Presidential Campaign Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Laura Gamboa, Sandra Botero, Lisa Zanotti
Polarizing rhetoric and negative tone are thought to generate more attention on social media. We seek to describe and analyze how presidential candidates in Colombia’s 2022 election deployed (de)polarizing rhetoric and tone, around what topics, and with what effects. We analyze the tweets (and corresponding engagement) of the four leading candidates during the campaign. Tone behaves as expected. Negatively
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Latin America’s Polarization in Comparative Perspective Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Jennifer McCoy
Political polarization is a systemic-level and multifaceted process that severs cross-cutting ties and shifts perceptions of politics to a zero-sum game. When it turns pernicious, political actors and supporters view opponents as an existential threat and the capacity of democratic institutions to process political conflict breaks down. The article identifies four common fault lines of polarization
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Anti-corruption Audits and Citizens’ Trust in Audit and Auditee Institutions Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-03 Letícia Barbabela
Anticorruption audits may deter corruption and signal to citizens that institutions are proactively combating it. However, by detecting and reporting corruption, audits might also unintentionally erode trust in institutions. Therefore, the impact of audits potentially hinges on whether they uncover corruption. Audit institutions, not implicated in the corruption they uncover, might be less likely to
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Introduction: The New Polarization in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-29 Rodolfo Sarsfield, Paolo Moncagatta, Kenneth M. Roberts
Mounting evidence suggests that Latin American democracies are characterized by politics and societies becoming more divisive, confrontational, and polarized. This process, which we define here as the “new polarization” in Latin America, seems to weaken the ability of democratic institutions to manage and resolve social and political conflicts. Although recent scholarship suggests that polarization
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Strategic Resources for Drug Trafficking Organizations and the Geography of Violence: Evidence from Mexico Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-29 Martín Macías-Medellín, Aldo F. Ponce
This article helps understand why locations close to strategic infrastructure to transport illegal drugs (seaports, airports, highways, and US ports of entry along the Mexico-US border) or to increase income (pipelines) experience different levels of violence due to DTOs operations. Our theory breaks down the impact of the geographical distance to these facilities on violence into two effects. The
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Populist Storytelling and Negative Affective Polarization: Social Media Evidence from Mexico Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-09 Rodolfo Sarsfield, Zacarías Abuchanab
The ideational definition of populism proposes that a narrative is populist if it is characterized by a Manichean cosmology that divides the political community between a “people,” conceived as a homogeneously virtuous entity, and an “elite,” conceived as a homogeneously corrupt entity. Departing from that conceptualization, this work first investigates the specific stories that Andrés Manuel López
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Shut Up! Governments’ Popular Support and Journalist Harassment: Evidence from Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Claudio Balderacchi, Andrea Cassani, Luca Tomini
During the past few decades, Latin American governments’ recurrent attacks against journalists have contributed to the erosion of press freedom in the region and, relatedly, of the quality of democracy. Yet what pushes governments to harass journalists? We argue that governments are more likely to harass journalists when popular support for them drops. Due to the ability of journalists to influence
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Why Didn’t Brazilian Democracy Die? Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Marcus André Melo, Carlos Pereira
Brazil, for many scholars and pundits, showcased the risk of democratic breakdown with the election of a far-right populist like Jair Bolsonaro. Against pessimistic expectations, however, not only has Brazilian democracy survived but politics has returned to business as usual. What can explain this supposedly unanticipated outcome? This article provides an analytical assessment of this this puzzle
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Approaching Equality? Media Treatment of Male and Female Members of Presidential Cabinets in a Cross-Country Comparison Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-05 Brenna Armstrong, Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson
Generalizability of extant findings about media treatment of women in politics is uncertain because most research examines candidates for the legislature or heads of government, and little work moves beyond Anglo-American countries. We examine six presidential cabinets in Costa Rica, Uruguay, and the United States, which provide differing levels of women’s incorporation into government. These cases
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Why Latin American Parties Are Not Coming Back Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-05 Omar Sánchez-Sibony
This essay documents growing partisan social uprootedness across Latin America over time, manifested in diminishing social trust toward parties, debilitation of links between parties and social collectivities, lowering levels of partisanship, and rising incidence of personalism in the electorate. It focuses on some unrecognized and undertheorized causal factors behind partisan involution in the region
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The Ideology of Brazilian Parties and Presidents: A Research Note on Coalitional Presidentialism Under Stress Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-24 Cesar Zucco, Timothy J. Power
This research note contributes updated and extended point estimates of the ideological positions of Brazilian political parties and novel estimates of the positions of all presidents since redemocratization in 1985. Presidents and parties are jointly responsible for the operability of Brazil’s version of coalitional presidentialism. Locating these key political actors in a unidimensional left–right
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“I Would Prefer Not To”: Establishing the Missing Link between Invalid Voting and Public Protest in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Alberto Lioy
While invalid voting is often treated as protest behavior in an electoral context, its association with actual political protests has not yet been empirically demonstrated. The relative scarcity of research on the topic is likely due to the hybrid nature of invalid voting as a both formal and informal political gesture. The novel availability of event-based data for public protests in Latin America
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The new corruption crusaders: Security sector ties as an anti-corruption voting heuristic Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Luiz Vilaça, Jacob R. Turner
Despite the salience of corruption in elections in Latin America and beyond, it remains unclear what makes certain candidates attractive to voters as solutions to address corruption. Building on studies about the effect of candidates’ professional affiliation on voting behavior, we hypothesize that police and military officers are perceived to be more competent to address corruption. We test our theoretical
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Inside the Black Box: Uncovering Dynamics and Characteristics of the Chilean Central Government Bureaucracy with a Novel Dataset Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-09 Daniel Brieba, Mauricio-René Herrera-Marín, Marcelo Riffo, Danilo Garrido
This article examines bureaucracies using a novel dataset of Chilean central government employees from 2006 to 2020. Unlike perception-based sources, this dataset provides objective, disaggregated, and longitudinal insights into bureaucrats’ characteristics and careers. The authors validate it against official employment statistics and conduct an exploratory and descriptive analysis, presenting six
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Partisan Stereotyping and Polarization in Brazil Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 David Samuels, Fernando Mello, Cesar Zucco
In recent decades, Brazilian voters have grown polarized between supporters of the Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers’ Party, PT), known as petistas, and its opponents, known as antipetistas. What explains this animosity? One potential source of polarization is partisan stereotyping, a tendency for partisans to misperceive the social composition of both their own side’s bases of support as well as
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Transitioning Guerrillas: An Analysis of the Internal Cohesion of the Former FARC in Their Transit from War to Democracy Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Juan E. Ugarriza, Rafael C. Quishpe, Diana C. Acuña, Mónica A. Salazar
The emergence of ex-rebels’ political parties after peace accords creates a vehicle for political reintegration, which in turn has positive effects on peace and democracy consolidation after war. However, many of these parties tend to break apart and disappear, elevating the risk of renewed cycles of political violence. In times of war, cohesion plays a pivotal role in maintaining the bonds among members
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Partial Presidential Vetoes and Executive–Legislative Bargaining: Chile, 1990–2018 Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-12-13 Jorge Belmar Soto, Patricio Navia, Rodrigo Osorio
Defined as a credible threat that strengthens the bargaining position of the executive, presidential vetoes, widely understudied, carry a stigma of confrontation between state powers. But under some institutional setups, partial vetoes can be an additional step in the executive–legislative bargaining process. After a discussion of whether partial vetoes are a proactive legislative tool or a bargaining
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The Bureaucratic Politics of Urban Land Rights: (Non)Programmatic Distribution in São Paulo’s Land Regularization Policy Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-12-04 Marcela Alonso Ferreira
How do bureaucrats implement public policy when faced with political intermediation? This article examines this issue in the distribution of land rights to informal settlements in the municipality of São Paulo, Brazil. Land regularization is a policy established over three decades, where politicians’ requests for land titles to their constituencies play a relevant role. Based on interviews and documents
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Who Gets Credit? Citizen Responses to Local Public Goods Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Katherine McKiernan
In decentralized systems, citizens struggle to identify which level of government provides local goods. This problem is particularly salient in weakly institutionalized party environments, where politicians at different levels of government are less likely to benefit from partisan coattail effects. This article asks how citizens attribute credit for local public goods. I argue that citizens have a
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Los nadies y las nadies: The Effect of Peacebuilding on Political Behavior in Colombia Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-13 Juan David Gelvez, Marcus Johnson
How do peacebuilding institutions affect political behavior? This article studies the historic victory of the Colombian left in the 2022 presidential elections in light of the implementation of local peacebuilding programs through the 2016 Peace Accords. Using a quasi-experimental design, we show that the Development Plans with a Territorial Focus (PDET), a central component of the 2016 Peace Accords
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The Losing Battle Against Neoliberal Trade Agreements in Latin America: Social Resistance Against the MTA Between Ecuador, Peru, and the European Union Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Manuel Preusser
This article studies the influence of the antineoliberal social movements in Peru and Ecuador in the face of the Multiparty Trade Agreement (MTA) between both countries and the European Union (EU). To identify and analyze this influence, a transdisciplinary theoretical framework was created, integrating debates and concepts from social movement theory and critical international political economy. In
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The National Legislatures in the Enlargement of Mercosur: Paraguay’s Acceptance of Venezuela and Bolivia Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-01 André Leite Araujo
Regional integration blocs are subject to the admission of new members, which must be approved by domestic institutions. This article analyzes how the incorporation of Venezuela and Bolivia into Mercosur passed in the Paraguayan Congress. While the first case lasted from 2007 to 2013, demonstrating parliamentary opposition, the second episode took place between 2015 and 2016, suggesting convergence
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Surges vs. Waves: Presidents, Popularity, and the Diffusion of Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Diego Vega
Conditional cash transfers (CCTs) are a striking case of policy diffusion in Latin America. Almost all countries in the region adopted the model within one decade. While most theories of diffusion focus on the international transference of ideas, this article explains that surge of adoptions by analyzing presidents’ expectations. Out of all ideas transmitted into a country, only a few find their way
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Political Control and Bureaucratic Resistance: The Case of Environmental Agencies in Brazil Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-10-27 Katherine Bersch, Gabriela Lotta
Why does the ability of political leaders to control the bureaucracy vary? With strong meritocratic recruitment and tenure protections, Brazil appears an ideal case for successful bureaucratic resistance against political control. However, our analysis reveals how Bolsonaro overcame initial resistance by recalibrating strategies, ultimately dominating many key sectors of the bureaucracy. Drawing on
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Foreign Policy Specificity: An Analysis of Ministerial Survival in Latin America, 1945–2020 Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-31 Pedro Feliú Ribeiro, Camilo López Burian
This research note analyzes the incentives of different types of policy areas for a president to keep or dismiss a minister. It uses ministerial survival analysis to compare foreign and domestic policy areas, focusing on comparable and analogous presidential decisions among countries and portfolios. The research utilizes ministerial survival data for education, finance, health, and foreign policy between
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Seeing Race Like a State: Higher Education Affirmative Action Verification Commissions in Brazil Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-28 Graziella Moraes Silva, Veronica Toste Daflon, Camille Giraut
A growing body of literature has focused on how different states continuously “make race” by legitimizing certain racial categories while invisibilizing others. Much less has been written on the actual processes of transforming race into a bureaucratic category when implementing antiracist public policies. This article focuses on the recent use of verification commissions to validate the racial self-identification
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Participatory Health Governance and HIV/AIDS in Brazil Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-08 Michael Touchton, Natasha Borges Sugiyama, Brian Wampler
This research note assesses participatory health governance practices for HIV and AIDS in Brazil. By extension, we also evaluate municipal democratic governance to public health outcomes. We draw from a unique dataset on municipal HIV/AIDS prevalence and participatory health governance from 2006–17 for all 5,570 Brazilian municipalities. We use negative binomial regression and coarsened exact matching
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Do Fiscal Transfers Affect Local Democracy? Lessons from Chilean Municipalities Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-06 Carla Alberti, Diego Díaz-Rioseco, Ignacio Riveros
Extant literature concurs that fiscal transfers affect local democracy when they grant subnational governments nontax revenue. Yet there is nonetheless a mismatch between this concept and existing measures, which consider the whole transfers local governments receive, including both tax and nontax revenue. This article studies the Fondo Común Municipal (FCM), the most important intergovernmental grant
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Bolsonaro and the Black Vote: Racial Voting in Brazil’s 2018 Election Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-05 David De Micheli
Two competing narratives characterize the role of race in Brazil’s 2018 election. Journalists observe that Jair Bolsonaro “entranced” nonwhite voters while “insulting them.” Scholars argue that Bolsonaro politicized race, costing him nonwhite support. In contrast, this article argues that racialized patterns of voter behavior were not distinct from those in recent general elections, and that voters’
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Estimating Parties’ Policy Positions in Uruguay: Comparing Scaling Methods Based on Legislative Speeches and Roll-Call Votes Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-05 Diego Luján, Nicolás Schmidt, Juan A. Moraes
This research note takes advantage of a novel dataset to analyze legislators’ behavior in Uruguay’s Parliament. Comparing the positions of legislators based on floor speeches and roll-call voting, it discusses the relationship between discourse and voting among individual legislators and parties. The dataset contains more than 57,000 speeches from more than 1,000 Uruguayan legislators between 1985
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Political Trust and Ecological Crisis Perceptions in Developing Economies: Evidence from Ecuador Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-05 Marija Verner
Could an individual’s perception of the possibility of a future ecological crisis be linked to their level of political trust? Studies of environmental attitudes have identified political trust as an important predictor of support for environmental taxation or risk perceptions surrounding specific local environmental hazards, but less is known about its role when environmental risks are perceived as
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Who Is Responsible for the Emergency Aid? Cash Transfer and Presidential Approval During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazil Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-05 Frederico Batista Pereira, Guilherme Russo, Felipe Nunes
Studies show that cash transfer programs increase incumbent approval through their financial impact and clear association with the executive. But does this effect hold when it is the legislature rather than the incumbent proposing the program? Amid the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, more than 60 million Brazilians received an emergency assistance payment that was proposed by Congress against resistance from
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Enforcing Citizen Participation Through Litigation: Analyzing the Outcomes of Anti-Dam Movements in Brazil and Chile Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-26 Marie-Sophie Heinelt, Valesca Lima
In environmental politics, social movements play a crucial role, promoting participatory rights and confronting injustice, inequality, and the interests of the powerful. This article examines an underexplored topic in the literature on social movements, especially in Latin America: the use of litigation to force decisionmakers to comply with participatory formats, specifically in the course of opposition
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Lost in Corporate Translation: How Firms Mediate Between Social Mobilization and Regulatory Intervention in the Extractive Sector Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-26 Paul Alexander Haslam, Julieta Godfrid
Firms should be considered as actors that potentially mediate between social movement pressures and policy outcomes. This article shows that at the mining project level, social mobilization can generate important changes in corporate practices toward nearby communities, and that these practices can undermine the cohesion of social movement coalitions advocating for regulatory intervention or reform
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Poverty, Partisanship, and Vote Buying in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-26 Mogens Kamp Justesen, Luigi Manzetti
Electoral contests in Latin America are often characterized by attempts by political parties to sway the outcome of elections using vote buying—a practice that seems to persist during elections throughout the region. This article examines how clientelist parties’ use of vote buying is jointly shaped by two voter traits: poverty and partisanship. We hypothesize that clientelist parties pursue a mixed
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From Second-Best to First-Best Veto Point: Explaining the Changing Uses of Judicial Review and Referendums in Uruguay Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-02 Florencia Antía, Daniela Vairo
The use of veto points to block policy change has received significant attention in Latin America, but the different institutional venues have not been analyzed in a unified framework. Uruguay is exceptional in that political actors use both referendums and judicial review as effective ways to oppose public policies. While the activation of direct democracy mechanisms in Uruguay has been widely studied
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Uneven States, Unequal Societies, and Democracy’s Unfulfilled Promises: Citizenship Rights in Chile and Contemporary Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-02 Juan Pablo Luna, Rodrigo M. Medel
In contemporary Latin America, deep-seated social discontent with political elites and institutions has been, paradoxically, the counterpart of democratic stability and resilience. This paradox suggests that scholarly assessments of democracy are, at least partially, at odds with citizens’ own views of democracy. This article thus develops a framework to describe citizens’ everyday experience with
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A Strategic Approach to the Alliance-Formation Process Between Activists and Legislators in Chile Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-18 Rodolfo López Moreno
Legislative allies are widely recognized as key to social movement success, but the emergence of their alliance with activists remains understudied. This article proposes a strategic approach to this phenomenon based on the cases of the environmental, labor, and LGBT+ movements in Chile and their allied legislators. According to this approach, an alliance emerges due to two necessary conditions. Movement
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The Pink Tide and Income Inequality in Latin America Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-11 Germán Feierherd, Patricio Larroulet, Wei Long, Nora Lustig
Latin American countries experienced a significant reduction in income inequality at the turn of the twenty-first century. From the early 2000s to around 2012, the average Gini coefficient fell from 0.51 to 0.47. The period of falling inequality coincided with leftist presidential candidates achieving electoral victories across the region: by 2009, 11 of the 17 countries had a leftist president—the
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Do Remittances Contribute to Presidential Instability in Latin America? Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-31 Jesse Acevedo
Are Latin American presidents at greater risk for removal in remittance-dependent countries? Departing from the debate about whether remittances produce democratic or autocratic outcomes, this article asks whether remittances contribute to presidential removals, which are an important characteristic of Latin American democracies since the Third Wave. It uses questions about supporting a military coup
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The Unintended Consequences of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs for Violence: Experimental and Survey Evidence from Mexico and the Americas Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 Daniel Zizumbo-Colunga
Because conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) can address the deep roots of violence, many scholars and policymakers have assumed them to be an effective and innocuous tool to take on the issue. I argue that while CCTs may have positive economic effects, they can also trigger social discord, criminal predation, and political conflict and, in doing so, increase violence. To test this claim, I take
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The Legal Contention for Baldíos Land in the Colombian Altillanura Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Carolina Hurtado-Hurtado, Dionisio Ortiz-Miranda, Eladio Arnalte-Alegre
This article describes the process of legal contention between civil society, political parties, and state institutions for the baldíos lands in the Colombian Altillanura region in the last two decades, a region considered the country’s “last agricultural frontier.” The article focuses on the dual and sometimes contradictory roles of the state institutions, both as facilitators of baldíos grabbing
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Rage in the Machine: Activation of Racist Content in Social Media Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 Sebastián Vallejo Vera
Racism in social media is ubiquitous, persisting online in ways unique to the internet while also reverberating from the world offline. When will racist frames activate in social media networks? This article argues that social media users engage with racist content when they perceive a threat to the in-group status, selecting frames that serve as markers to separate the in-group identity from the out-group
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Too Legit to Quit? Analyzing the Effect of No-Confidence Motions on Cabinet Members’ Instability in Presidential Systems: The Cases of Colombia and Peru Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-13 Jhon Kelly Bonilla-Aranzales
How does the execution of horizontal accountability mechanisms affect cabinet members’ instability? This article analyzes distinct features of no-confidence motions (NCMs) in presidential systems, using a mixed-method research design that identifies elements of legislative control mechanisms in Peruvian and Colombian polities. Although the congress in presidential systems rarely approves NCMs, high
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Legislative Quotas and the Gender Gap in Campaign Finance: The Case of the 2014 and 2018 Legislative Elections in Colombia Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-03-08 Bart Maddens, Gertjan Muyters, Gert-Jan Put
Earlier empirical research on party list proportional representation systems shows that women spend less on campaigns than men, particularly when quotas are applied. An analysis of the candidate campaign expenses for the 2014 and 2018 Colombian Lower Chamber elections provides a novel test of this gender gap and its underlying causes. The research design leverages Colombia’s unique context of electoral
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Willingness: Human Rights Crises and State Response in Mexico Latin American Politics and Society (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-20 Alejandro Anaya-Muñoz, Janice K. Gallagher
States targeted by human rights criticism usually do something—whether ratifying treaties, passing laws, establishing institutions, prosecuting perpetrators, or shifting discourse. But how do we know how coordinated, comprehensive, and effective these actions are? This article proposes five questions to assess how willing a state is to take the steps necessary to meaningfully respond to human rights