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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2021

Caitlin Andrews-Lee
Affiliation:
Ryerson University

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
The Emergence and Revival of Charismatic Movements
Argentine Peronism and Venezuelan Chavismo
, pp. vii - viii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. List of Figures

  2. List of Tables

  3. Acknowledgments

  4. Part ITheoretical Discussion

    1. 1Introduction

      1. 1.1The Puzzle: The Surprising Resilience of Charismatic Movements

      2. 1.2The Main Argument

      3. 1.3The Relevance and Contributions of This Study

      4. 1.4Research Design

      5. 1.5Key Concepts: Charisma, Populism, and Charismatic Movements

      6. 1.6Case Selection

      7. 1.7Overview

    2. 2A Theory of Charismatic Movement Revival

      1. 2.1Central Tenets of the Routinization Thesis

      2. 2.2The Insufficiency of the Routinization Thesis

      3. 2.3A New Theory of Charismatic Movement Revival

      4. 2.4The Consequences of Charismatic Movement Revival for Democracy

  5. Part IIThe Demand Side: Charisma from the Followers’ Perspective

    1. 3The Formation of Charismatic Attachments

      1. 3.1Establishing Charismatic Attachments

      2. 3.2Charismatic Attachments in Chávez’s Venezuela

      3. 3.3Assessing the Relevance of Alternative Linkage Types

      4. 3.4A Quantitative Analysis of Competing Attachment Mechanisms

      5. 3.5Conclusion

    2. 4The Survival of Charismatic Attachments

      1. 4.1A Theory of Charismatic Movement Survival

      2. 4.2Resilient Identities and the Survival of Charismatic Movements: Evidence from Focus Groups

      3. 4.3Results: The Personalistic Mechanism of Identity Perpetuation

      4. 4.4Conclusion

    3. 5The Reactivation of Charismatic Attachments

      1. 5.1A Theory of Charismatic Attachment Reactivation

      2. 5.2Testing the Reactivation of Charismatic Attachments: Evidence from Survey Experiments

      3. 5.3Conclusion

  6. Part IIIThe Supply Side: Charisma from the Leaders’ Perspective

    1. 6The Politics of Succession in Charismatic Movements

      1. 6.1A Theory of Charismatic Revival

      2. 6.2Testing the Theory: Charismatic Successors in Latin America

      3. 6.3Conclusion

    2. 7The Spasmodic Trajectories of Charismatic Movements

      1. 7.1The Fits and Starts of Charismatic Movements

      2. 7.2The Consequences of Charismatic Movement Revival for Democracy

      3. 7.3The Revival of Charisma and the Tumultuous History of the Peronist Movement

      4. 7.4Conclusion

    3. 8Theoretical Implications and Broader Conclusions

      1. 8.1Theoretical Implications

      2. 8.2Charismatic Movement Revival in Comparative Perspective

      3. 8.3Conclusion

  7. Bibliography

  8. Index

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