Publication | Open Access
State–society relations in uncertain times: Social movement strategies, ideational contestation and the pandemic in Brazil and Argentina
52
Citations
14
References
2021
Year
Latin American StudySocial ChangeSocial SciencesActivismLatin American SocietyGovernment PolicyGeopoliticsPublic PolicyPolitical ChangeComparative PoliticsBrazil MovementsProgressive Social MovementsSocial MovementsState–society RelationsSociologyPolitical TransformationSocial Movement StrategiesArtsUncertain TimesPolitical Science
This article compares how COVID-19 affected state–society relations differently in two relatively similar countries: Brazil and Argentina. Bringing together social movement theories and ideational institutionalism, we argue that variation in responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is explained by the different roles played by social movements inside and outside government and by contrasting ideational disputes. The extreme uncertainty introduced by the pandemic generated intense contestation about the meaning of the crisis and how to resolve it. In Brazil, progressive social movements not only were excluded from the government coalition, but also had to combat a powerful discourse that denied the existence of a crisis altogether. Such denialism did not flourish in the same way in Argentina, where progressive social movements were part of national government processes. The result was that in Argentina, movement–government dynamics revolved around constructing long-term policy proposals, whereas in Brazil movements focused on short-term emergency responses.
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