Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Decolonizing Approaches to Latin American Social Movements
View through CrossRef
Abstract
This chapter introduces decolonizing approaches as a perspective from which to study Latin American social movements. Decolonizing approaches allow us to surpass the disheartening diagnoses of a significant part of social movement theories that argue that Latin American movements had little potentia to denounce modernity crises and even less to offer alternatives to it. The decolonizing approaches show that the theories on social movements are colonial despite being critical of modernity. The purpose of this chapter is to elucidate how the decolonizing approaches provide crucial elements and debates to resist and comprehend basic colonial premises and enable a change of terms under which we can produce, evaluate, and stratify knowledge on social movements. It is the dialogue with movements—as opposed to about movements—that makes it possible to evaluate collective action. The chapter is structured in four sections. The first describes the consolidation of decolonizing approaches. The second presents its contributions to the study of Latin American social movements. Section three maps some of the concepts proposed by decolonizing approaches that constitute analytical keys for approaching collective action today. The last section points to the decolonizing readings of the struggles for territory in Latin America as an emerging research-action area indubitably urgent today. The chapter ends by recognizing challenges for the decolonizing approaches and their study of social movements.
Title: Decolonizing Approaches to Latin American Social Movements
Description:
Abstract
This chapter introduces decolonizing approaches as a perspective from which to study Latin American social movements.
Decolonizing approaches allow us to surpass the disheartening diagnoses of a significant part of social movement theories that argue that Latin American movements had little potentia to denounce modernity crises and even less to offer alternatives to it.
The decolonizing approaches show that the theories on social movements are colonial despite being critical of modernity.
The purpose of this chapter is to elucidate how the decolonizing approaches provide crucial elements and debates to resist and comprehend basic colonial premises and enable a change of terms under which we can produce, evaluate, and stratify knowledge on social movements.
It is the dialogue with movements—as opposed to about movements—that makes it possible to evaluate collective action.
The chapter is structured in four sections.
The first describes the consolidation of decolonizing approaches.
The second presents its contributions to the study of Latin American social movements.
Section three maps some of the concepts proposed by decolonizing approaches that constitute analytical keys for approaching collective action today.
The last section points to the decolonizing readings of the struggles for territory in Latin America as an emerging research-action area indubitably urgent today.
The chapter ends by recognizing challenges for the decolonizing approaches and their study of social movements.
Related Results
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Increased life expectancy of heart failure patients in a rural center by a multidisciplinary program
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
INTRODUCTION Patients with heart failure (HF)...
Primary PCI: a reasonable treatment for STEMI care during the COVID-19 pandemic
Primary PCI: a reasonable treatment for STEMI care during the COVID-19 pandemic
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: None.
Introduction
...
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
Introduction The counterculture that arose during the 1960s and 1970s left lasting social and political reverberations in developed nations. This was a time of increasing affluenc...
Gender and Social Movements
Gender and Social Movements
The sociological study of gender and social movements is relatively new. Until the 1970s, scholarship on social movements largely neglected questions of feminism and gender, and th...
Editorial Note
Editorial Note
The image on the cover of this second issue of JOLCEL shows a detail from the so-called Franks Casket, an early eight-century Anglo-Saxon chest made out of whale’s bone, possibly d...
Decolonizing Evaluation Teaching and Learning in the Global South
Decolonizing Evaluation Teaching and Learning in the Global South
Abstract
Decolonizing evaluation, as a research topic in the evaluation field, has recently gained considerable attention. However, most of the literature on the ...
Bioethics-CSR Divide
Bioethics-CSR Divide
Photo by Sean Pollock on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
Bioethics and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) were born out of similar concerns, such as the reaction to scandal and the restraint ...
Decolonizing Language Education
Decolonizing Language Education
Abstract
Due to colonialism and imperialism, Indigenous languages and communities worldwide have been subjected to genocide; colonial government policies and legi...

