Engendering the Latin American state
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Progress in Human Geography
- Vol. 22 (4) , 523-542
- https://doi.org/10.1191/030913298674323659
Abstract
Drawing on feminist theories of the state, this article critiques and extends the current usage of state theory in Latin Americanist geography. I argue that a nuanced mapping of social dynamics requires understanding the state as capitalist and patriarchal. Beginning with issues that are typically framed at the global scale, the review works progressively toward local and microscale analysis. Attention is given to distinct areas of scholarship which are appropriate for dealing with states and with the politics that produce and maintain them. Several questions are addressed throughout the review. First and most importantly, how have Latin Americanist geographers conceptualized the state? Secondly, have these conceptualizations been adequate for understanding the geography of state formation and dynamics? Thirdly, what have been the limitations and consequences of these approaches? Finally, how have state/society relations been understood? These questions guide a critical reading of the discipline's literature on the region while suggesting that a feminist critical realist perspective on the state offers powerful insights into Latin American politics, society and social change.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Decentralizing a Centralized State: Local Government Finance in Chile Within the Latin American ContextPublic Budgeting & Finance, 1994
- The frontiers of earth — and of political geography: The sea, Antarctica and outer spacePolitical Geography Quarterly, 1991
- Primary-Care Decentralization in the Southern Cone: Shantytown Health Care as Urban Social MovementAnnals of the American Association of Geographers, 1991
- Spatially and Socially Progressive State Policy and Programs: The Case of Brazil's National Housing BankAnnals of the American Association of Geographers, 1990
- A New Path to Development? The Significance and Impact of Hernando De Soto's Ideas on Underdevelopment, Production, and ReproductionEconomic Geography, 1990
- An Introduction to Current Research on Latin American CitiesEconomic Geography, 1990
- Housing during recession: Illustrations from Latin AmericaHousing Studies, 1989
- Geopolitics, generals and the state in BrazilPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986
- The new political geography of the seaPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1986
- Political geography of contemporary events VII: The view from the near north— South Americans view Antarctica and the Southern Ocean geopoliticallyPolitical Geography Quarterly, 1985