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Transformation of a “Revolution from Below”–Bolivia and International Capital

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Susan Eckstein
Affiliation:
Boston University

Extract

A nationalist coalition with middle-class leadership seized control of the Bolivian state in 1952. Uprisings immediately broke out in the countryside, and peasants seized lands previously held in large estates. In response to pressure from below, the new government in 1953 initiated an agrarian reform that destroyed the economic base of the landed oligarchy. It also reorganized old agrarian institutions and created new ones to serve the rural poor. Yet government policies a short while after the revolution ceased to favor the peasantry.

Type
Politics of Capitalist Agriculture
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1983

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