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Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)

Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina By Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)

Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina by Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)


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Summary

This book scrutinizes the series of food riots in Argentina in December 2001. It pays particular attention to the secret relationships among looters, political activists, and police forces. These clandestine relationships constitute the gray zone of politics.

Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina Summary

Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina: The Gray Zone of State Power by Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)

Close to three hundred stores and supermarkets were looted during week-long food riots in Argentina in December 2001. Thirty-four people were reported dead and hundreds were injured. Among the looting crowds, activists from the Peronist party (the main political party in the country) were quite prominent. During the lootings, police officers were conspicuously absent - particularly when small stores were sacked. Through a combination of archival research, statistical analysis, multi-sited fieldwork, and taking heed of the perspective of contentious politics, this book provides an analytic description of the origins, course, meanings, and outcomes of the December 2001 wave of lootings in Argentina.

Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina Reviews

This fascinating study of the Argentine food riots of December 2001 that brought down an elected president makes an important contribution to our understanding of contentious politics and to socio-political life more generally through its illumination of the understudied 'grey zone' where clandestine connections blur distinctions between everyday life, routine politics and collective violence. Auyero's case study is well written and finely drawn, based on numerous interviews backed by a quantitative analysis for all relevant reported events. Especially striking are his findings on how critical action and inaction of political party brokers and the police were to the spread and then the ending of the food riots - but often in surprising ways. Auyero builds from his case material theoretically significant generalizations about the obscure and obscured actions of clientilistic party brokers facilitating widespread looting as police forces stand aside (or even participate themselves). This provocative work encourages us to look for the concealed connections between Routine Politics and Violence in many places beyond Argentina. -Charles Brockett, University of the South
[...]shows how collective violence is a collective product--of authority *and* opposition. This study helps us to understand the hidden 'parallel politics' of seeming social breakdown, and how Argentina has moved from military dictatorship to a 'low-intensity democracy' that systematically marginalizes large numbers of citizens and exempts an elected government from true accountability in the structures of social control. -Alison Brysk, University of California-Irvine
Riots are often seen as senseless episodes of rebellious disorder precipitated by - and symptomatic of - a breakdown of authority. Not to that careful student of the world of Argentina's poor, Javier Auyero. His splendid interviews with participants, including victims, demonstrate the central roles of political brokers and police during a week of looting in 2001. His research compellingly shows the rootedness of this episode of collective violence in the everyday lives of the poor. As he shines his spotlight on what he calls 'the grey zone,' it is not an extraordinary absence of authority that is revealed, but its ordinary presence. -John Markoff, University of Pittsburgh
Auyero is a skilled ethnographer, and he makes ample use of 100 interviews with actors of all kinds to vividly reconstruct the ways participation made sense of their own roles and those of others around them. [...]it is worth noting the book's distinctive approach, which is a micro-level analysis of highly individual actors whose self-understandings are a central focus. When the book's questions remain at this micro-level[...]this is a very rewarding strategy, immediate in a way that few political analyses are. -Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico, Perspectives on Politics

About Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)

Javier Auyero is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York, Stony Brook. He was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2001 and a Harry Frank Guggenheim Fellowship in 2005. He is the author of Poor People's Politics and Contentious Lives and has published articles in Theory and Society, Ethnography, Mobilization, Latin American Research Review, and the Journal of Latin American Studies, among others. He is the current editor of Qualitative Sociology.

Table of Contents

1. The gray zone; 2. Party politics and everyday life; 3. Food lootings; 4. Moreno and La Matanza lootings; 5. Making sense of collective violence.

Additional information

NPB9780521872362
9780521872362
0521872367
Routine Politics and Violence in Argentina: The Gray Zone of State Power by Javier Auyero (State University of New York, Stony Brook)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2007-04-16
202
Winner of American Sociological Association Best Book Award in the Political Sociology Section 2008
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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