Venezuela's Bolivarian Democracy brings together a
variety of perspectives on democracy in Venezuelan civil
society. An interdisciplinary group of contributors
focuses on the everyday lives of ordinary Venezuelans,
examining the participatory forms of democracy that have
emerged in communal councils, cultural activities,
blogs, community media, and many other forums. The
essays show that while Venezuelans have gained
significant experience with new forms of social
organization and participatory governance during the
past decade, the central government still often displays
a top-down corporatism. Many grassroots chavistas decry
irregularities and allege manipulation of internal
processes by bureaucrats and politicians. The essays in
this collection validate some of their concerns, yet the
contributors do not seize on these shortcomings to
dismiss Venezuela's Bolivarian democratic experience as
a familiar story of populism and clientelism. Instead,
they reveal a nuanced process, a richer and more complex
one than is conveyed in international journalism and
scholarship focused on the words and actions of Hugo
Chavez.Contributors: Carolina Acosta-Alzuru, Julia
Buxton, Luis Duno Gottberg , Sujatha Fernandes, Maria
Pilar Garcia-Guadilla, Kirk A. Hawkins, Daniel C.
Hellinger, Michael E. Johnson, Luis E. Lander, Margarita
Lopez-Maya, Elizabeth Gackstetter Nichols, Coraly Pagan,
Guillermo Rosas, Naomi Schiller, David Smilde, Alejandro
Velasco |
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