Popular Movements in Autocracies: Religion, Repression, and Indigenous Collective Action in Mexico

Awards:   Short-listed for American Sociological Association Collective Behaviour & Social Movements Section: Charles Tilly Award 2013 Short-listed for Charles Tilly Award, Section on Collective Behaviour and Social Movements, American Sociological Association 2013 Shortlisted for American Sociological Association Collective Behaviour & Social Movements Section: Charles Tilly Award 2013.
Author:   Guillermo Trejo (Duke University, North Carolina)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107680562


Pages:   334
Publication Date:   17 July 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Popular Movements in Autocracies: Religion, Repression, and Indigenous Collective Action in Mexico


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Awards

  • Short-listed for American Sociological Association Collective Behaviour & Social Movements Section: Charles Tilly Award 2013
  • Short-listed for Charles Tilly Award, Section on Collective Behaviour and Social Movements, American Sociological Association 2013
  • Shortlisted for American Sociological Association Collective Behaviour & Social Movements Section: Charles Tilly Award 2013.

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Full Product Details

Author:   Guillermo Trejo (Duke University, North Carolina)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.500kg
ISBN:  

9781107680562


ISBN 10:   1107680565
Pages:   334
Publication Date:   17 July 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Guillermo Trejo expands our knowledge of social movements by incorporating the long-lost factor of religion, broadening the context in which we understand why people rebel. His comprehensive examination of Mexican rebellions should be read widely by anyone interested in the topic of protest and revolution. - Anthony Gill, University of Washington How does religious competition beget indigenous mobilization? How does 'competition for souls' turn into 'competition for votes?' What transforms a peasant movement into armed rebellion? And, finally, what is the impact of armed rebellion on democratization? Guillermo Trejo shows how peasant collective action and insurgency in Mexico emerged from deeper and less visible political processes. Having established that complexity, he then explains this process in a way that is general, simple, and elegant, combining deep understanding, long-term participant observation, and exhaustive empirical data collection and analysis. A superb book. - Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University Guillermo Trejo's impressive study seeks to explain the emergence of indigenous protest in Mexico, why that protest at times turned violent and gradually incorporated ethnic demands, and how that protest helped bring about democratization in Mexico. Lucidly argued and exhaustively researched, Trejo's long-awaited book makes an important contribution to our understanding of Mexican politics as well as to broader theories of ethnic politics and social movements. - Raul L. Madrid, University of Texas at Austin Popular Movements in Autocracies is a tour de force. Guillermo Trejo masterfully marshals rich and rigorous ethnographic evidence to advance a bold new theory of collective action by poor people. By integrating research on social movements, electoral institutions, and the political economy of religion, the book achieves a powerful synthesis that offers a far stronger explanation of the contrasting fortunes of poor people's movements in modern autocracies. - Richard Snyder, Brown University In this richly, theoretically informed study, Guillermo Trejo turns the traditional model of Latin American indigenous protest on its head. Rather than seeing neoliberal policies mobilizing traditional indigenous communities into protest and rebellion he shows how peasant networks in competitive communities constructed ethnic identities where authoritarian state governments used repressive policies to enforce neoliberal reforms. Southern Mexico is the site of his richly empirical research, but his findings extend to wherever Latin American peasant movements engage in protest and rebellion. - Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University


'This study offers a new perspective on the rise (and what Trejo sees a the post-democratisation 'twilight') of indigenous mobilisation in Mexico … this is a book that invites us to rethink historical processes in general terms that are also causal terms.' John Gledhill, Journal of Latin American Studies


'This study offers a new perspective on the rise (and what Trejo sees a the post-democratisation 'twilight') of indigenous mobilisation in Mexico ... this is a book that invites us to rethink historical processes in general terms that are also causal terms.' John Gledhill, Journal of Latin American Studies Guillermo Trejo expands our knowledge of social movements by incorporating the long-lost factor of religion, broadening the context in which we understand why people rebel. His comprehensive examination of Mexican rebellions should be read widely by anyone interested in the topic of protest and revolution. Anthony Gill, University of Washington How does religious competition beget indigenous mobilization? How does 'competition for souls' turn into `competition for votes'? What transforms a peasant movement into armed rebellion? And, finally, what is the impact of armed rebellion on democratization? Guillermo Trejo shows how peasant collective action and insurgency in Mexico emerged from deeper and less visible political processes. Having established that complexity, he then explains this process in a way that is general, simple, and elegant, combining deep understanding, long-term participant observation, and exhaustive empirical data collection and analysis. A superb book. Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University Guillermo Trejo's impressive study seeks to explain the emergence of indigenous protest in Mexico, why that protest at times turned violent and gradually incorporated ethnic demands, and how that protest helped bring about democratization in Mexico. Lucidly argued and exhaustively researched, Trejo's long-awaited book makes an important contribution to our understanding of Mexican politics as well as to broader theories of ethnic politics and social movements. Raul L. Madrid, University of Texas, Austin Popular Movements in Autocracies is a tour de force. Guillermo Trejo masterfully marshals rich and rigorous ethnographic evidence to advance a bold new theory of collective action by poor people. By integrating research on social movements, electoral institutions, and the political economy of religion, the book achieves a powerful synthesis that offers a far stronger explanation of the contrasting fortunes of poor people's movements in modern autocracies. Richard Snyder, Brown University In this richly, theoretically informed study, Guillermo Trejo turns the traditional model of Latin American indigenous protest on its head. Rather than seeing neoliberal policies mobilizing traditional indigenous communities into protest and rebellion he shows how peasant networks in competitive communities constructed ethnic identities where authoritarian state governments used repressive policies to enforce neoliberal reforms. Southern Mexico is the site of his richly empirical research, but his findings extend to wherever Latin American peasant movements engage in protest and rebellion. Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University This study offers a new perspective on the rise (and what Trejo sees a the post-democratisation 'twilight') of indigenous mobilisation in Mexico ... this is a book that invites us to rethink historical processes in general terms that are also causal terms. John Gledhill, Journal of Latin American Studies


Author Information

Guillermo Trejo is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Duke University. He was previously on the faculty at the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) in Mexico City. Trejo's research focuses on collective action and social protest, armed insurgencies and political violence and religion and ethnic identification in authoritarian regimes and new democracies. His work has been featured in the American Political Science Review, the Journal of Latin American Studies and Política y gobierno. Trejo's dissertation received the 2006 Mancur Olson Award from the Political Economy Section of the American Political Science Association and his research on religious competition and ethnic mobilization in Latin America received the 2011 Jack Walker Outstanding Article Award from the APSA Political Organizations and Parties Section.

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