Artículos de revistas
Compulsion mechanisms: state-movement dynamics in Buenos Aires
Fecha
2017-09Registro en:
Rossi, Federico Matias; Compulsion mechanisms: state-movement dynamics in Buenos Aires; Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd; Social Movement Studies; 16; 5; 9-2017; 578-594
1474-2837
1474-2829
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Rossi, Federico Matias
Resumen
The article reveals and explains the workings of generally ignored mechanism of state–movement interaction proposed by Charles Tilly, namely the compulsion mechanism. Specifically, two types of compulsion mechanisms will be defined: compulsive support and compulsive control. In both types, without using physical repression, the state’s institutions reinforce the movement’s identity while also prompting it to adapt its repertoire of strategies to the state institutions’ requirements. Empirically, this article focuses on the interaction of the assembly movement with the state in the City of Buenos Aires. This movement emerged as a result of the socioeconomic and political crises of 2001–2002 in Argentina. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research, the purpose is to unpack how the assembly movement’s identities and strategies were built and how its interaction with the state evolved.