Forging Democracy from Below: Insurgent Transitions in South Africa and El SalvadorCambridge University Press, 2000 M10 30 - 247 páginas The recent replacement of authoritarian rule by democracy in both South Africa and El Salvador poses a puzzle: why did the powerful, anti-democratic elites of these countries abandon death squads, apartheid, and the other tools of political repression and take a chance on democracy? Forging Democracy From Below shows how popular mobilization--in El Salvador an effective guerilla army supported by peasant collaboration and in South Africa a powerful alliance of labor unions and poor urban dwellers--forced the elite to the bargaining table, and why a durable settlement and democratic government were the result. |
Contenido
FROM CIVIL WAR TO DEMOCRACY | 3 |
FROM CONSERVATIVE MODERNIZATION TO CIVIL WAR | 25 |
THE STRUCTURAL FOUNDATION OF A PACT THE TRANSFORMATION OF ELITE INTERESTS | 52 |
NEGOTIATING A DEMOCRATIC TRANSITION TO END CIVIL WAR | 78 |
APARTHEID CONSERVATIVE MODERNIZATION AND MOBILIZATION | 111 |
THE CHALLENGE TO ECONOMIC ELITE INTERESTS | 143 |
FROM RECALCITRANCE TO COMPROMISE | 169 |
THE INSURGENT PATH TO DEMOCRACY IN OLIGARCHIC SOCIETIES | 197 |
THE LEGACY OF DEMOCRACY FORGED FROM BELOW | 209 |
A Model of Negotiated Resolution of Civil Conflicts | 213 |
Note on Statistical Sources | 219 |
221 | |
239 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Forging Democracy from Below: Insurgent Transitions in South Africa and El ... Elisabeth Jean Wood Sin vista previa disponible - 2000 |
Términos y frases comunes
According actors Afrikaner agrarian reform agro-export alliance ANC's apartheid areas ARENA bantustan bargaining business organizations campesino capital civil conflicts civilian coffee Commission compromise constitutional COSATU costs countries death squads decline demobilization despite economic elites El Salvador elections electoral elite interests emergence employers FMLN Gerhart guerrilla hardliners implementation increased influx control initial insurgent counter-elite interviews investment issues Johannesburg labor-repressive institutions land landlords leaders leadership liberal Lipton Mandela ment militant military National Party nomic O'Meara officers oligarchic oligarchic societies ongoing ONUSAL P. W. Botha Paige party's peace agreement peace process peasant percent political mobilization political party profit rate racial reformist regime elites repression result role rural SACP Salvadoran San Salvador sector security forces significant social South Africa Soweto uprising Stanley strike structure sustained Tenancingo tion transition to democracy University Press unrest urban Usulután violence wages workers