Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xm8r8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-23T21:50:19.707Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Religious and Social Participation in War-Torn Areas of El Salvador

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Ileana Gómez*
Affiliation:
PRISM (Environment and Development Research Program)

Abstract

The Salvadoran civil war destroyed local community life throughout the province of Morazán. Despite the peace accords, poverty, unequal land distribution, and a “culture of violence” demand structural and institutional transformations well beyond the individual moral regeneration offered by churches. Religion, however, supplies coping tools, especially for youth, women, and repatriated refugees. By focusing on local issues, furthermore, churches are fostering social participation among hitherto disenfranchised groups, a critical element in building an inclusive, robust democracy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Benítez-Manaut, Raúl 1988. Guerra e intervención norteamericana (1979–1988). In El Salvador: guerra, política y paz, ed. Edgar, Jiménez Cabrera. San Salvador : CINAS-CRIES.Google Scholar
Cavendish, James. 1995. Christian Base Communities and the Building of Democracy: Brazil and Chile. In Religion and Democracy in Latin America, ed. William, H. Swatos New York : Transaction. 7591.Google Scholar
Dirección General de Estadística y Censos (DIGESTYC). 1993. Censo Nacional de 1993. San Salvador : DIGESTYC.Google Scholar
Dirección General de Estadística y Censos (DIGESTYC). 1996. Encuesta de hogares de propósitos múltiples. San Salvador : Ministerio de Economía.Google Scholar
Drogus, Carol. 1997. Women, Religion, and Social Change in Brazil's Popular Church. Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press.Google Scholar
Salvador, El 1995. Diez primeras causas más frecuentes de morbilidad. Nivel nacional 1995. San Salvador: Ministerio de Salud.Google Scholar
Gordon Rapoport, Sara. 1989. Crisis política y guerra en El Salvador. Mexico City : Siglo Veintiuno.Google Scholar
Guidos Bejar, Rafael. 1998. Deliberación pública democrática. El Diario de Hoy (San Salvador), Suplemento especial, Plan de Nación apuesta para ganar. San Salvador: Tendencias Editores, October 27: 7. See also Tendencías Editores 1999.Google Scholar
Houtart, François, and Lemercinier, Geneviève. 1989. La cultura religiosa de las comunidades de base en Nicaragua. Managua : Centro de Análisis Socio-Cultural, UCA.Google Scholar
Jelin, Elizabeth. 1994. Ciudadanía emergente o exclusión? Movimientos sociales y Ong's en los años noventa. Revista Mexicana de Sociología 56, 4: 91108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, Daniel. 1992. Popular Voices in Latin American Catholicism. Princeton : Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Mariz, Cecilia. 1992. Religion and Poverty in Brazil: a Comparison of Catholic and Pentecostal Communities. Sociological Analysis 53: S63S70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menjívar, Larín, Rafael. 1998. Mesas de integración en Costa Rica. El Diario de Hoy (San Salvador See also Tendencias Editores 1999.Google Scholar
Montes, Segundo. 1989. Refugiados y repatriados: El Salvador y Honduras. San Salvador : IDHUCA.Google Scholar
Opazo, Andrés. 1985. El movimiento religioso popular en Centroamérica: 1970–1983. In Movimientos populares en Centroamérica, Costa Rica : EDUCA. 143–99.Google Scholar
Pontes Sposito, Marilia. 1994. Violencia colectiva, jóvenes y educación. Revista Mexicana de Sociología no. 3 (July–September): 113–25.Google Scholar
Peterson, Anna, and Manuel, A. Vásquez. 1998. The New Evangelization in Latin American Perspective. Cross Currents 48, 3: 311–29.Google Scholar
Ramos, Carlos. 1998. Transición, jóvenes y violencia. En América Central en los noventa. Problemas de juventud, ed. Ramos, . San Salvador : FLACSO Programa El Salvador. 189229.Google Scholar
Socorro, Jurídico 1982. El Salvador: la situación de los derechos humanos, 1979–1981. Report. San Salvador.Google Scholar
Smith, Christian. 1995. The Spirit and Democracy: Base Communities, Protestantism, and Democratization in Latin America. In Religion and Democracy in Latin America, ed. William, H. Swatos New York : Transaction. 125.Google Scholar
Smutt, Marcela, and Miranda, Jenny. 1998. El fenómeno de las pandillas en El Salvador. San Salvador : UNICEF/FLACSO.Google Scholar
Stein, Andrew. 1998. El Salvador. Mimeograph. January 23.Google Scholar
Tendencias, Editores. 1999. Bases para el Plan de Nación. http:www.tendencias.netsuplementos03delibera.htm. (April 6).Google Scholar
Vásquez, Manuel A. 1998. The Brazilian Popular Church and the Crisis of Modernity. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Williams, Philip. 1996. The Sound of Tambourines: The Politics of Pentecostal Growth in El Salvador. In Power, Politics, and Pentecostals in Latin America, ed. Edward, Cleary and Hannah, Stewart-Gambino. Boulder : Westview Press.Google Scholar