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Events |
2003 EventsLand Occupations, Violence, and the Politics of Agrarian Reform in Brazil John L. Hammond Landowners and local authorities frequently respond to farm occupations by landless farmworkers with violent repression. Their action reflects the hybrid character of the Brazilian state, modern and rational in cities and at the federal level but, in many rural areas, still clientelistic and marked by nonlegitimate violence. Land occupiers, landowners, and authorities jointly enact a repertoire of collective action that corresponds to the backward character of the state in those areas. The action of the land occupiers, however, is legitimated by the claim of civil disobedience while the efforts to repress them cannot lay claim to legitimacy on that basis. John L. Hammond is the author of Fighting to Learn:
Popular Education and Guerrilla War in El Salvador (Rutgers University
Press, 1998) and Building When: Monday, October 20 5:00pm To reserve, send e-mail to brazilproject@gc.cuny.edu or leave message at (212) 817-2096
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Bildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies |