Abstract
This study contains a theoretical analysis of the ways in which social theory conceptualized the collective action of popular sectors and the impact of these interprelations on the political process of the transition to democracy during the 1980s and the early 1990s in Santiago, Chile. A review of the two major paradigms to explain the type and characteristics of the new social movements; one aimed at the mobilization of resources, the other oriented towards identity, permils the reconstruction of the scenario and the theoretical discussion accompanying the emergence of the stalled New Social Movements (NMS) in Latin America in general and Chile in particular
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