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After Insurgency: Revolution and Electoral Politics in El Salvador

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posted on 2019-04-24, 00:00 authored by Ralph Sprenkels
El Salvador's 2009 presidential elections marked a historical feat: Frente Farabundo Mart\u00ed para la Liberaci\u00f3n Nacional (FMLN) became the first former Latin American guerrilla movement to win the ballot after failing to take power by means of armed struggle. In 2014, former comandante Salvador S\u00e1nchez Cer\u00e9n became the country's second FMLN president. _After Insurgency_ focuses on the development of El Salvador's FMLN from armed insurgency to a competitive political party. At the end of the war in 1992, the historical ties between insurgent veterans enabled the FMLN to reconvert into a relatively effective electoral machine. However, these same ties also fueled factional dispute and clientelism. Drawing on in-depth ethnographic fieldwork, Ralph Sprenkels examines El Salvador's revolutionary movement as a social field, developing an innovative theoretical and methodological approach to the study of insurgent movements in general and their aftermath in particular, while weaving in the personal stories of former revolutionaries with a larger historical study of the civil war and of the transformation process of wartime forces into postwar political contenders. This allows Sprenkels to shed new light on insurgency's persistent legacies, both for those involved as well as for Salvadoran politics at large. In documenting the shift from armed struggle to electoral politics, the book adds to ongoing debates about contemporary Latin America politics, the 'pink tide,' and post-neoliberal electoralism. It also charts new avenues in the study of insurgency and its aftermath.

History

Date Created

2018-04-30

Date Modified

2019-04-24

Language

  • English

Alternate Identifier

9780268103286|9780268103279

Extent

492 pages

Publisher

University of Notre Dame Press

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