208 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

220 Pages
by Routledge

Populism in Venezuela analyses the emergence, formation, reproduction and resistance to a left-wing populist project in a major world oil producer. For readers who seek to understand the historical, economical and sociological contexts that gave rise to a 38 year-old mestizo-mulato Lieutenant Colonel who stormed the presidential palace in a bloody coup d’état in 1992, subsequently returned to... Read more

Introduction. 1. Populism, Theories, and Logics: A Theoretical and Methodological Approach. 2. The Venezuelan State: Its Formation, Consolidation and Decline. 3. The Process of Deinstitutionalizing the Power Structure and Institutionalizing Venezuela’s Bolivarian Project. 4. A Healthcare Program in Excluded Areas: A Community Participative Model Constructs Healthcare with Cuban Medics in Venezuela. 5. The Anti-Bolivarian Student Movement: New Social Actors Challenge the Advancement of Venezuela’s Bolivarian Radicalism 6. Indefinite Re-election, Gerrymandering, Chávez’s Cancer, Grand Missions and a United Opposition Force. Conclusion.

Biography

Ryan Brading is Post-Doctoral Fellow at University of Essex, UK.

"At the centre of debates on populist politics in Latin America, this book’s combination of impressive knowledge and careful argument will make it a touchstone reference for understanding Venezuela’s contemporary transformation. It offers fresh and vital new insight on the past, present, and future of the Bolivarian project."

—Adam David Morton, The University of Nottingham

"Ryan Brading brings an original and imaginative perspective to an issue of fundamental concern to discourse analysis: the role of the state and ideology in legitimizing current Venezuela’s military populism. The result is a highly suggestive work which will have to be confronted on one level or another by any future study of populism in Latin American societies. It is a book that well worth the reading.

—Luis Ricardo Davila, Harvard University

"This book provides a rigorous and well-researched study of one of the most important national-popular regimes that have emerged in Latin America over the last fifteen years: Chavez's Venezuela. Brading's work constitutes a remarkable contribution to the understanding of one of the most original political movements of our time, and it is bound to become a necessary reference for the scholars working in the field of Latin American politics."

—Ernesto Laclau, Northwestern University