Results 71 to 80 of about 207 (112)
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Latin American Perspectives, 2010
Study of a social movement in Los Angeles called Casa del Pueblo reveals the limitations of current theory on transnational social movements and advocacy networks. Whereas current theory tends to view the diffusion of political culture as a one-way process whereby Western ideas diffuse from the wealthier North to the Third World, Casa del Pueblo was ...
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Study of a social movement in Los Angeles called Casa del Pueblo reveals the limitations of current theory on transnational social movements and advocacy networks. Whereas current theory tends to view the diffusion of political culture as a one-way process whereby Western ideas diffuse from the wealthier North to the Third World, Casa del Pueblo was ...
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Zapatismo as a Resonant Public Pedagogy
Latin American Perspectives, 2018As a critical pedagogy similar to the type described by the philosopher-educator Paulo Freire, Zapatismo expresses resistance to the power-over relationships institutionalized in capitalism and the state through open-ended questioning. Previous analyses have argued that the Zapatista struggle has been incommunicable, that it can be defined in terms of
James K. Anderson, Noah J. Springer
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Zapatismo and Urban Political Practice
Latin American Perspectives, 2005On January 1, 1996, the Ejercito Zapatista de Liberaci6n Nacional called for the creation of the Frente Zapatista de Liberaci6n Nacional (FZLN), a national civil Zapatista organization that would build a new kind of political movement (EZLN, 1996). This new organization would be built from the ground up by citizens committed to carrying out Zapatista ...
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Zapatismo in the Movement of Movements
Development, 2005Peter Rosset, Maria Elena Martinez-Torres and Luis Hernandez-Navarro argue that the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas proved to be a key turning point and re-awakening for the global Left, or perhaps more accurately, the figurative birth of the movement that replaced the ‘old Left.’ The Zapatistas gave the new movements new forms and more inclusive methods
Peter Rosset +2 more
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Zapatismo and the Social Sciences
Capital & Class, 2002The zapatista uprising poses fundamental challenges for how we think about social theory and political practice. The great contribution of the zapatistas has been to break the connection between revolution and control of the state.
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How Activists “Take Zapatismo Home”
Latin American Perspectives, 2010Transnational Zapatismo exemplifies a broader pattern wherein Southern movements inspire discourses and practices in the Global North that challenge lines of economic and political domination. Recent scholars describe South-North mutuality at the level of international framing.
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2007
Enough is enough! So declared the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) that emerged from the jungles of southern Mexico to occupy the town of San Cristobal de las Casas on New Year’s Day 1994. On the same day that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was proclaimed, the Zapatistas declared NAFTA a ‘death sentence for Indigenous people’.
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Enough is enough! So declared the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) that emerged from the jungles of southern Mexico to occupy the town of San Cristobal de las Casas on New Year’s Day 1994. On the same day that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was proclaimed, the Zapatistas declared NAFTA a ‘death sentence for Indigenous people’.
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Zapatismo Seen from Inside and Out
Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, 2007Mi Paso por el Zapatismo (un Testimonio Personal). By Octavio Rodriguez Araujo. Mexico DF, Editorial Oceano, 2005. Understanding the Chiapas Rebellion: Modernist Visions and the Invisible Indian.
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