Unfinished Transitions: Women and the Gendered Development of Democracy in Venezuela, 1936-1996 |
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INTRODUCTION | 1 |
UNFINISHED TRANSITIONS | 15 |
THE PARADOXICAL RISE AND FALL OF THE WOMENS MOVEMENT IN THE FIRST TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY 19361948 | 53 |
WHY MACHISMO WAS STRONGER THAN A MILITARY DICTATORSHIP Womens Organizing in the Second Transition to Democracy 19481973 | 101 |
REGENDERING POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES The Growth of Conjunctural Coalition Building Under Democratic Consolidation 19741982 | 139 |
INSTITUTIONALIZING SUCCESS Women Unite Within and Outside of the State for Social and Political Reform 19841990 | 193 |
THE DECLINE OF COALITION BUILDING DURING DEMOCRATIC CRISIS 19891995 | 233 |
VENEZUELAN ALTERNATIVES GENDERED OPPORTUNITIES AND WOMENS ORGANIZING IN LATIN AMERICAN DEMOCRATIZATION | 265 |
APPENDIX | 293 |
295 | |
316 | |
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action activism activists advance agency association building called campaign centers central challenge Civil Code civil society claimed coalition commission conference CONG Congress continued demands democracy democratic dictatorship discourse discussion domestic workers dominance early economic effective efforts elections equal established experience female feminist gender gender relations groups importance included incorporation increased institutions interests interview issues labor Latin American leaders leadership major male March meeting ment mobilization mothers movement Mujeres opposition participation percent Pérez period political opportunities political parties poor popular positions president problems promote proposal protection reflected reform regime representation representatives response result role sectors social strategies structure struggle successful suffrage tion took traditional transition Union United Venezuelan woman women women's movement women's organizing women's rights workers