Article contents
Patronage Politics and Contentious Collective Action: A Recursive Relationship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Abstract
Based on ethnographic reanalysis and on current qualitative research on poor people's politics, this article argues that routine patronage politics and nonroutine collective action should be examined not as opposite and conflicting political phenomena but as dynamic processes that often establish recursive relationships. Through a series of case studies conducted in contemporary Argentina, this article examines four instances in which patronage and collective action intersect and interact: network breakdown, patron's certification, clandestine support, and reaction to threat. These four scenarios demonstrate that more than two opposing spheres of action or two different forms of sociability, patronage, and contentious politics can be mutually imbricated. Either when it malfunctions or when it thrives, clientelism may lie at the root of collective action.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © University of Miami 2009
References
- 90
- Cited by