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Power, Patronage, and Political Violence, Power, Patronage, and Political Violence, 0803212976, 0-8032-1297-6, 978-0-8032-1297-8, 9780803212978, Judy Bieber

Power, Patronage, and Political Violence
State Building on a Brazilian Frontier, 1822-1889
Judy Bieber

hardcover
1999. 253 pp.
Map
978-0-8032-1297-8
$55.00 $13.75 s
 
Use code SALE75 at checkout.

Judy Bieber explores the relationship between state centralization and municipal politics in Minas Gerais, Brazil, during the Imperial Period, 1822–89. She charts the nineteenth-century origins of coronelismo, a form of machine politics that linked rural power and patronage at the municipal level to state and federal politics.
 
By highlighting the structural role of the municipality within the political system, Bieber provides a key to explaining Brazil’s so-called exceptionalism—its ability to maintain territorial and political cohesion within the framework of a constitutional monarchy instead of fragmenting violently, as did many Spanish republics.
 
Despite the maintenance of national unity, political violence characterized much of Brazil’s political history, especially in the municipalities of its frontier regions. Historians have often attributed the chaotic nature of these politics to geographical isolation and decentralization of power. Bieber challenges these assumptions, arguing instead that state centralization was the primary factor contributing to political violence in Brazil’s frontier regions.
 
The Brazilian national government centralized appointments of municipal authorities, thereby linking partisan affiliation on the periphery with provincial and national political parties. Local appointees corrupted and abused the mechanisms of social control in order to attain electoral victories for political patrons who had rewarded them with official jobs. This system produced escalating violence and promoted judicial impunity at the municipal level while simultaneously creating political stability at the provincial and federal levels.
 
National discourse attributed political violence to a natural tendency possessed by rural elites in the uncivilized backlands. Municipal actors, however, belied prevailing stereotypes of ideological passivity and intellectual backwardness. In the press and in private correspondence they actively sought to define the terms of their political participation, developing their own conceptions of liberalism and ethical norms of political patronage.

Judy Bieber is an assistant professor of history at the University of New Mexico.

"This study breaks new ground in examining the formation of the Brazillian Empire from the periphery rather than from the center. . . . This book is full of perceptive insights."—Joseph L. Love, The American Historical Review

"Lucid and invaluable case study of 19th-centruy Brazilian local and provincial politics. Handsomely printed and containing a dozen useful tables, this monograph is a significant contribution to Brazilian studies."—Choice


2001 Warren Dean Memorial Prize, sponsored by the Conference on Latin American History, honorable mention

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