1st Edition
Social Movement Dynamics New Perspectives on Theory and Research from Latin America
Biography
Federico M. Rossi is a Research Fellow at the Center for Inter-American Policy and Research in Tulane University, USA. His research focuses on trade unions and social movements in Argentina and Brazil, democratization and contentious politics in Latin America and Europe, and youth political participation. His work has been published in several edited volumes, International Sociology, Social Movement Studies, Mobilization, Latin American Perspectives, Latin American Politics and Society, European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and in Desarrollo Económico, among others. Marisa von Bülow is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Brasilia, Brazil, and a researcher at the Catholic University in Chile. Her work analyzes transnational civil society networks and, more recently, the uses of digital tools for activism. von Bülow’s research has appeared in Mobilization and other scholarly outlets. She is the author of the award-winning book Building Transnational Networks: civil society and the politics of trade in the Americas (Cambridge University Press, 2010, published in Portuguese in 2014).
’This new collection blends traditions of research on social movements and contentious politics from various regions with Latin American perspectives in the Latin American context. Drawing heavily on the political process, resource mobilization, and transnational politics traditions, the authors advance our knowledge of Latin American contention in three areas: transcending the boundaries between contentious and routine politics; embedding social movements in the context of economic, political, and environmental change; and examining the new organizational repertoires that have emerged in Latin America since democratization.’ Sidney Tarrow, author of War, States and Contention ’Latin America has seen innumerable instances of political contention over centuries. However, mainstream social movement analysts from the political process school have paid fairly scant attention to that continent. This book fills this gap admirably. Far from imposing Western analytic categories over a different setting, the authors develop a fruitful dialogue between different theoretical currents. This book will appeal to both social movement analysts who do not specialize in Latin America and area experts from other intellectual perspectives. Highly recommended.’ Mario Diani, University of Trento, Italy and ICREA-UPF, Barcelona, Spain






