Title

Repression, opportunity, and protest: Explaining the takeoff of Brazil's landless movement

Abstract

During the mid-1990s, Brazil experienced a rapid intensification of protest for land reform. Official land reform efforts also accelerated, and the issue became a central topic of public concern and debate. This article seeks to account for the abrupt intensification of collective action and to explain its relationship to the other changes, focusing on the political impact of two massacres of landless protesters in 1995 and 1996. These incidents forced authorities to accelerate land reform and to exercise somewhat greater caution in repressing the movement. The shifts in state behavior then helped to accelerate collective action. This argument lends weight to the idea that state repression against a social movement can sometimes serve to engender even greater protest. it also identifies a previously undescribed causal mechanism, political opportunity, linking repression to protest.

Department(s)

Political Science

Document Type

Article

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1353/lap.2006.0023

Publication Date

6-1-2006

Journal Title

Latin American Politics and Society

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