1st Edition

Lula, the Workers' Party and the Governability Dilemma in Brazil

By Hernán F. Gómez Bruera Copyright 2013
278 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

278 Pages
by Routledge

278 Pages
by Routledge

While scholars, activists and pundits from around the world have heralded the Lula years as a breakthrough for poverty reduction and the forthcoming emergence of Brazil as a dynamic economic superpower, many of their counterparts in the country as well as a number of Brazilianists elsewhere, have expressed great disappointment. Tracing back the trajectory of Brazilian Workers’ Party... Read more

Introduction 1. The challenge of governability for progressive parties Part I: The PT before Lula 2. The formative phase of the PT and its socio-political field 3. Moving towards the state: the reconfiguration of the PT field 4. Social and elite-centred strategies at work: The PT in sub-national executive office Part II: The Lula Years 5. Political governability under Lula: The elite-centred perspective in ascendancy 6. From the "Lula Monster" to an icon of the "responsible Left" 7. Participation without counter-hegemony 8. Securing social governability: Dealing with allies in civil society 9. Accomplishments within the balance of forces 10. Final Remarks

Biography

Hernán F. Gómez Bruera has a PhD from the Institute of Development Studies, at the University of Sussex, with and academic interest on Latin American and Brazilian politics, progressive parties and social movements. His first two books are Desde el Sur (Altamira, Buenos Aires) and Conversaciones sobre el Hambre: Brasil y el derecho a la alimentación (CEDRSA, México). He has worked as a consultant for international organizations, as a political analyst and as a freelance journalist.

"Hernán Gómez Bruera looks inside the PT and its social networks to understand how state power has transformed the party’s reform agenda. His book provides a unique and highly insightful account of the ways in which parties with origins in social movements adapt to—and are transformed by—the exercise of political power in formal governing institutions."

—Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University

"Gómez Bruera provides a very smart, comprehensive, and nuanced account of the PT’s rise to power and how it has been transformed by power. Poised between its roots in Brazil's social movements and the imperatives of governing in a fragmented polity, the PT’s trajectory is a fascinating and revealing case study in the possibilities and limits of transformative politics."

—Patrick Heller, Brown University