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This is the first truly comparative study of the relationship between social movements and citizenship rights. Focusing on the experiences of Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Spain, the authors employ sophisticated quantitative research methods to measure comparative variations between these two factors, analyzing their relationship both within and across national cases. They proceed to test the main connections made between movements and rights in both theory and history, evaluating these in the light of the experience of modern authoritarian regimes.
| List of Figures | ||
| List of Tables | ||
| Abbreviations | ||
| Variables Used in the Statistical Analysis | ||
| Introduction: Citizenship Rights and Social Movements | ||
| 1 | Citizenship, Collective Action, and the State | 1 |
| 2 | Individual Rights, Social Movements, and Waves of Protest | 26 |
| 3 | Methods and Sources | 46 |
| 4 | The Contours of Citizenship Rights | 70 |
| 5 | The Contours of Social Movements | 119 |
| 6 | Relating Citizenship Rights and Social Movements over Time | 166 |
| 7 | Relating Citizenship Rights and Social Movement through Time | 195 |
| 8 | Social Movements, Individual Rights, and Democratic Transitions | 225 |
| App. A | Case Synopses and Chronologies | 244 |
| App. B | Banks Legal Institutional Index (BANKSLII) Components | 251 |
| App. C | Boolean Results | 253 |
| References | 263 | |
| Index | 293 |
Overview
This is the first truly comparative study of the relationship between social movements and citizenship rights. Focusing on the experiences of Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Spain, the authors employ sophisticated quantitative research methods to measure comparative variations between these two factors, analyzing their relationship both within and across national cases. They proceed to test the main connections made between movements and rights in both theory and history, evaluating these in the light of the ...