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The politics of convergence in Bolivia: social movements and the state
Authors:Ben M McKay
Institution:1. Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canadaben.mckay@ucalgary.ca
Abstract:Abstract

The convergence of social movements in Bolivia was a decisive factor in bringing President Evo Morales and the Movement Towards Socialism (Movimiento al Socialismo, hereafter MAS) to power in 2006. Yet in recent years, this convergence has become fraught with internal tensions as the state’s extractivist development model and promises for plurinationalism and alternative forms of development reveal fundamental contradictions. This paper traces the formation of social movement alliances over time, revealing their power to effect change and their strength when there is unity in diversity. Rather than ‘neoliberalism’ which represented the injustice frame and united identity- and class-based politics during the rise of the MAS, the single greatest threat to the indigenous, peasants, originarios, women and the youth in the current context is extractivism.
Keywords:Social movements  convergence  state–society relations  extractivism  Bolivia
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