When movements become parties : the Bolivian MAS in comparative perspective / Santiago Anria.
Tipo de material: TextoIdioma: Español Detalles de publicación: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2019Descripción: xxiv, 275 p. : 24 cmISBN: 9781108427579 (hardback)Tema(s): Movimiento al Socialismo (Bolivia) | Movimientos sociales -- aspectos políticos -- BoliviaClasificación LoC:JL2298.M28 | A67 2019Resumen: "Why do some parties formed by social movements develop top-down structures while others stay more open and responsive to their social bases? The first rigorous comparative study of movement-based parties, this book shows not only how movements can form parties but also how movements contribute to parties' internal politics and shape organizational party models over the long term. Although the existing literature argues that movement-based parties will succumb to professionalization and specialization, Anria shows that this is not inevitable or preordained through an in-depth examination of the unusual and counterintuitive development of Bolivia's MAS. Anria then compares the evolution of the MAS with that of other parties formed by social movements, including Brazil's PT and Uruguay's FA. In a region where successful new parties of any type have been rare, these three parties are remarkable for their success. Yet, despite their similar origins, they differ sharply in their organizational models"-- Provided by publisher.Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Signatura | Copia número | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Libro | Centro de Documentación y Archivos Digitales de IIC-Museo | JL2298.M28 A67 2019 (Browse shelf(Abre debajo)) | 1 | Disponible | IIC008518 |
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"Why do some parties formed by social movements develop top-down structures while others stay more open and responsive to their social bases? The first rigorous comparative study of movement-based parties, this book shows not only how movements can form parties but also how movements contribute to parties' internal politics and shape organizational party models over the long term. Although the existing literature argues that movement-based parties will succumb to professionalization and specialization, Anria shows that this is not inevitable or preordained through an in-depth examination of the unusual and counterintuitive development of Bolivia's MAS. Anria then compares the evolution of the MAS with that of other parties formed by social movements, including Brazil's PT and Uruguay's FA. In a region where successful new parties of any type have been rare, these three parties are remarkable for their success. Yet, despite their similar origins, they differ sharply in their organizational models"-- Provided by publisher.