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Marketing Democracy
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Amid protests against the Pinochet regime, a group of población(shantytown) residents came together in 1984 to challenge poor health care in their community and to denounce military rule. How did t...
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02 April 2001

Amid protests against the Pinochet regime, a group of población(shantytown) residents came together in 1984 to challenge poor health care in their community and to denounce military rule. How did their organization respond seven years later when Chile's transition to democracy brought an end to dictatorship but no clear solution to ongoing health problems? Marketing Democracy shows how the exercise of power and the strategies of social movements transformed with the transition from a military to an elected-civilian regime in Chile. The term "marketing democracy" refers first to how contemporary democracies are shaped by transnational market forces, and second to how politicians have promoted democracy with the twin goals of attracting foreign capital and diminishing social movements.
Price: $18.95
Pages: 273
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date:
02 April 2001
ISBN: 9780520935747
Format: eBook
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Introduction
La Bandera in the Social Imaginary
PART ONE: History of Collective Action
1. The Founding of the Población
2. Military Rule
3. Transition to Democracy
PART TWO: Ethnography of Democracy
4. Marketing Democracy
5. The Paradox of Participation
6. Legitimation of Knowledge
Epilogue
Appendix. Health Group's Ethnography
Notes
References
Index
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Introduction
La Bandera in the Social Imaginary
PART ONE: History of Collective Action
1. The Founding of the Población
2. Military Rule
3. Transition to Democracy
PART TWO: Ethnography of Democracy
4. Marketing Democracy
5. The Paradox of Participation
6. Legitimation of Knowledge
Epilogue
Appendix. Health Group's Ethnography
Notes
References
Index