Populism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Populism is a political discourse that juxtaposes "the people" with "the elites". Populism may comprise an ideology urging social and political system changes and/or a rhetorical style deployed by me...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Populism
"Populism in Latin America has been an enormous problem identified with ex Argentine president Juan Domingo Perón and Evita, Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, Alberto Fujimori, and Luis Echeverria of México, chimed in Alberto Núñez of the Mexican Businessmen's Association that same day.
www.counterpunch.org/carlsen10092004.html
So while some contemporary observers, especially on the left, called populist leaders “fascistas,” others on the right called them dangerous “leftist demagogues.” Populism in Latin America demonstrated the clear capacity, as well as autonomy, whereby “common” men and women independently pursued bottom...
www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/1903
If the term populism was initially borrowed from radical farmers' movements in the United States in the late nineteenth century to describe early-twentieth-century political developments in Latin America, since then it has certainly acquired a special relevance for understanding this region's politics.
science.jrank.org/pages/7986/Populism-in-Latin-America.... science.jrank.org/pages/7986/Populism-in-Latin-America.html
Amazon.com: Populism in Latin America (9780817309701): Michael L.
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MICHAEL L. CONNIFF (ed.): Populism in Latin America. Tuscaloosa and London: University of Alabama Press, 1999. ... For the purposes of a clear working definition as a research tool and a basis for academic dialogue, I prefer to limit the use of the term "populism" to Latin America of the 1920s to the 1960s.
www.tau.ac.il/eial/XII_1/rein.html
History may never repeat itself, but some patterns have a tenacious staying power. ... COHA Report: The Rebirth of Populism in Latin America Poses A Powerful Challenge to the Neoliberal Order ... Latin America's Populism: Is Bush Getting It Wrong 19/11/2007...
www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0608/S00312.htm
Over the past week, important public figures from Mexico’s President Vicente Fox to Interamerican Development Bank President Enrique Iglesias have joined forces to warn that “populism” is rearing its ugly head again in Latin America. ... By far the most dangerous application of the populism epithet has been the U.S.
americas.irc-online.org/am/836 americas.irc-online.org/am/836
The rebirth of populism in Latin America poses a powerful challenge to the neoliberal order ; ... So while some contemporary observers, especially on the left, called populist leaders "fascistas," others on the right called them dangerous "leftist demagogues." Populism in Latin America demonstrated the clear capacity,
www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/green.htm www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/green.htm