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2019, Jacobin Magazine
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7 pages
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The social upheaval in Chile has made it clear that the country's Pinochet-era, neoliberal constitution must go. But the process of replacing it cannot be a top-down affair. Like the popular assemblies that have carried the rebellion forward, it must be based on democratic mass participation. Chile needs a structural change, a new social pact to erase the mark of the neoliberal dictatorship on Chilean democracy once and for all. Millions have taken to the streets to protest against the neoliberal model, the precariousness of daily life for the non-rich in the richest country in Latin America, the negligence and corruption of the political class, left and right, and also to demand a new constitution. Although President Sebastian Piñera begrudgingly accepted this reality recently, claiming that "nobody predicted" this popular uprising, the truth is that neither the massive mobilizations nor the demand for a new constitution are surprising. What is surprising is that smart people deluded themselves into thinking that Chile could have been governed by the Pinochet constitution forever, despite its illegitimate, undemocratic origin, its imposition of neoliberal economics and social conservatism alien to the Chilean masses, or its social impact in terms of what the Chilean "miracle" model has produced: great aggregate wealth that has been appropriated mostly by the richest 1 percent, who own more than one-third of the country's GDP, an indebted and precarious middle class, and a working class living in conditions of poverty.
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN STUDIES, 2022
With the case of contemporary Chile at hand, the article examines the institutional contradiction between neoliberalism and democracy as a source of social protests and popular rebellions. Chile transitioned in 1990 to a representative democracy, presumably encouraging political equality and participation. However, given the orientation of governments toward fostering capitalist accumulation, Chile did not develop mechanisms for fully incorporating into the political arena the emerging and increasingly resourceful civil society. After decades of incubation, this contradiction produced collective grievances that activated social movements and popular revolts. This coalesced in 2019 when a national-scale social uprising opened a process of constitutional change and democratic innovation. I illustrate this argument by examining contemporary student, indigenous, women and labor mobilizations. Democratic governments responded differently to the demands of these four movements depending on the extent they threatened capital accumulation and state sovereignty. I also pay special attention to the 2019 social uprising and the ongoing constitutional change process (until March 2022), which brings exciting innovations to deliberation and democracy.
South Atlantic Quarterly, 2023
As an introductory framework to the dossier, this article analyzes the Chilean political process based on the images that (re)emerged with the 2019 revolt and that were deployed in the constitutional process channeled into a Constitutional Convention (2020–22). It shows how the old ghosts of class, gender, and the nation appear in these “mental images,” the same ghosts that have historically operated in the defeat of transformative projects and contributed to the reproduction of an authoritarian and elitist society, whose neoconservative/neoliberal oligarchy has managed to restore the conditions of its domination. The article proposes these observations to stimulate the reading of the contributions to this dossier, which problematize different aspects of the political process under discussion: the aporetic relationship among revolt, violence, and law; the citizenry's turn from a desire of community and transformation expressed in the revolt to a feeling of fear and attachment to private property; writing as a practice, support, and challenge of the people's critical expression; the tension between the performance of the revolt as a failure and as a reset of neoliberal performativity; and the territorial and deterritorializing wagers in relation to affective infrastructures that became revolt and that continue through other means.
The paper examines the causes of Chile's October 2019 wave of protest and the path taken in the relationship between institutional policies and social mobilisations, and that led to the 2020 referendum for a New Constitution. It is based on a hypothesis on the transformation of society and the configuration of democracy in its cultural and political dimensions. The key question posed is: To what extent can the two main problems be solved?, to wit: (1) finding a new social-economic order to replace the model imposed during the dictatorship ("Neo-Liberalism with Chilean features")-a model that was tweaked by the Concertación and the Nueva Mayoría Centre-Left coalition governments (Garretón, 2012; Mayol, 2013; Atria; 2013); (2) coming up with new kinds of links between politics and social movements, offering scope for going beyond the classic model and for marking a radical break with the past, as in Chile's case.
The essay details the Chilean government’s influence in democratic processes, internal and external opposition of each, economic plans to address imperialism, and how close to a social utopia Chile had reached. Through the analysis it will be clear that the citizens were especially important in recalling and recognizing a government who often manipulated and used them as political or economic prey.
Revista Avesso: Pensamento, Memória e Sociedade, 2020
The following essay is an attempt to unify and contextualize much of the media coverage on Chile's protest waves throughout the end of 2019. Information was drawn from Chilean, Brazilian, and international English-speaking publications. After establishing a coherent timeline and narrative to the protests, I set out to understand the composition and dynamics of the protests. Finally, I explore possible causes and precedents to the Chilean crisis in education, healthcare, pensions, poverty and inequality.
THE BOTTLENECK OF NEOLIBERALISM AND THE CHILEAN REVOLUTION, 2019
A blog article published by the Centre for Comparative and International Research in Education of the University of Bristol Website https://cire-bristol.com/2019/11/20/the-bottleneck-of-neoliberalism-and-the-chilean-revolution/ During the last three weeks, Chilean unrests show to the world the social crisis of neoliberalism as a structure of state formation. The international media has broken the communicational censorship imposed by the Chilean government, showing violations of Human Right (see the links The Guardian, The Washington Post). The Chilean political situation has been savage; 5.629 people have been arrested, 2.009 people injured, 197 people have lost one or both eyes. Last weekend a 21-years-old undergraduate student was blinded by rubber bullets in his both eyes. Also, there are 283 cases of police sexual abuse (you can see the violent action of Chilean police here -sensitive content-, and a New York Times report here). I share my experience in the Chilean unrests while I was running my fieldwork.
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law, 2021
Chile has often drawn the global spotlight, serving as a laboratory for some of the most dramatic political experiments of the past fifty-plus years. In 1970, adhering to well-established democratic rules of the game, Chileans elected Marxist president Salvador Allende, who sought to lead his country to socialism through legal means. Three years later, a military junta led by General Augusto Pinochet violently overthrew the Allende government, committing massive human rights violations that terrorized the population into submission, and proceeded to restructure the Chilean state and society along radical neoliberal lines, entrenching the model in a new constitution in 1980. After fifteen years of dictatorship, the democratic opposition managed to use some of the military regime's own constitutional rules and institutions to beat Pinochet in a plebiscite on his continued leadership, triggering a negotiated transition to civilian rule in 1989-1990. In the thirty years that followed, democratic political elites gradually reformed institutions and introduced social policies that helped lower the poverty level dramatically and raised the country's human development indicators into the "very high" bracket. However, inequality remained stubbornly high and middle-class status precarious, and the 1980 Constitution, despite several rounds of reforms, continued to place strict substantive and procedural limits on what democratic majorities could do to address these problems. Popular discontent with the economic system and the political institutions that maintained it thus grew, and in October 2019, boiled over in massive street protests referred to as the "social explosion" (estallido social). After a month of upheaval, elected officials from across the political spectrum negotiated a formal agreement, acceding to one of the key demands of the protestors: a democratic path to constitutional replacement. 1 Chile is thus once again drawing international attention as it pursues an experiment in constitutional rewrite within democracy. This special issue of the Hague Journal on the Rule of Law brings together topnotch analyses by experts on Chilean law and politics that dissect and reflect upon
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