Honduras: The Politics of Exception & Military Reformism (1972-1978)

14735504_7-2.qxd.goldlabel

The specificities of contemporary Honduran politics are explored by examining both national historical development and the cooption of popular protest by military reformism in the I970s. The dynamics underpinning demobilisation of the popular movement after 1976 are explained with reference to both the agrarian reform implemented by the military and certain features of local political culture, such as patronage and clientelism, which – it is argued – were utilised selectively to coopt a sector of the organised labour movement. Divisions within the popular movement, in part a product of traditions of state-labour relations, were also significant in weakening the popular challenge.

Download PDF | Cambridge Journals

(1995) “Honduras: The Politics of Exception and Military Reformism (1972-1978)”, Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol.27 (1): 99-127.

Scroll To Top