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Hierarchy and Trust in Modern Mexico and Brazil - Roniger, Luis
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In this book, Luis Roniger offers a comprehensive and systematic discussion of the influence of clientelism and clientelistic relationships in social and political life in Mexico and Brazil. The author describes, analyzes, and compares clientelistic arrangements not only in terms of economic development and social differentiation, but also as a strategy of interaction and control over economic and political markets shaped both by structural factors and cultural patterns. Contrary to some theorists who argue that clientelism disappears following industrialization and modernization, Roniger sees…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In this book, Luis Roniger offers a comprehensive and systematic discussion of the influence of clientelism and clientelistic relationships in social and political life in Mexico and Brazil. The author describes, analyzes, and compares clientelistic arrangements not only in terms of economic development and social differentiation, but also as a strategy of interaction and control over economic and political markets shaped both by structural factors and cultural patterns. Contrary to some theorists who argue that clientelism disappears following industrialization and modernization, Roniger sees clientelistic networks as both a distinct institutional pattern and a major model of structuring social exchange. Thus, he argues that it may be more reasonable to expect changes in the forms of Mexican and Brazilian clientelism, rather than its demise following economic development and political transformation. Roniger begins with a general discussion of clientelism and trust, exploring the variety of clientelistic bonds, the conditions which lead to the emergence of clientelism, and the dynamics of Latin American clientelism. Following a chapter on the institutional contexts of Mexico and Brazil, the author presents an extended analysis of clientelism in the two countries. In each case, Roniger presents a historical overview, discusses the dominant characteristics of clientelism in that country, and examines clientelism in the rural, urban, labor, and political sectors. Subsequent chapters compare and contrast Mexican and Brazilian variants of clientelism. In the final chapter, Roniger places the Latin American data within its broader cultural context, comparing Mexican and Brazilian clientelism with hierarchical arrangements in Japan, Thailand, and India. He concludes that although political and social change in Mexico and Brazil has led to major transformations in clientelistic patterns, clientelism has been retained as an important element of social exchange in these societies. Sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists, Latin American specialists, and students of development will find Roniger's work and incisive portrait of Mexican and Brazilian institutional development and social realities.
Autorenporträt
Sociólogo político comparativo, ocupa el cargo de profesor Reynolds de Estudios Latinoamericanos en Wake Forest University, Estados Unidos. Es autor de numerosos libros y unos doscientos artículos académicos. Es miembro de comités editoriales de revistas académicas publicadas en Argentina, Colombia, España, Estados Unidos, Reino Unido, Israel y México. Entre los libros se cuentan Patrons, Clients and Friends (Cambridge University Press, 1984, con S. N. Eisenstadt); O legado das violações dos direitos humanos no Cone Sul (São Paulo, Perspectiva, 2005, con M. Sznajder); Transnational Politics in Central America (University Press of Florida, 2011); La política del destierro y el exilio en América Latina (Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2013, con M. Sznajder); Destierro y exilio en América Latina. Nuevos estudios y avances teóricos (Eudeba, 2014); Exile, Diaspora and Return (Oxford University Press, 2018, junto con L. Senkman, S. Sosnowski y M. Sznajder); y la Historia mínima de los derechos humanos en América Latina (Colegio de México, 2018).