Lula's assault on rural patronage: Zero Hunger,ethnic mobilization and the deployment of pilgrimage |
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Authors: | Aaron Ansell |
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Affiliation: | 1. aansell@vt.edu |
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Abstract: | This paper explores the Workers’ Party government's attempt to use anti-poverty policy to disrupt rural patronage, and the implications of this effort for theories of patronage. I argue that state officials and race-based activists implementing President Lula's flagship ‘Zero Hunger Program’ (2003–2005) turned mundane program exercises into pilgrimage rites in an effort to build lateral solidarities among Afro-Brazilians and undermine their vertical patronage alliances. The partial success of such efforts suggests that there are circumstances in which vertical and horizontal alliances are compatible, and that investigating this compatibility entails consideration of local categories of exchange. |
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Keywords: | Brazil zero hunger patronage clientelism |
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