Abstract

This article analyzes the dynamic of political mobilization and representation developed by the major social movements in present-day Peru, which unfold in a context still marked by structural reforms, constitutional changes and the persistence of an authoritarian ideological consensus that give shape to the so-called “post-Fujimori” period. Thus, this article addresses the process by which these movements create convergences in platforms and come together as much as between organizations as with institutionalized political actor such as parties, venturing into electoral competition.

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