Participation, Social Movements and Public Policies

The early systematization of a research agenda

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22478/ufpb.2525-5584.2019v4n3.49188

Abstract

Since around the year 2000, researchers have been analyzing the approach between social movements and public policies that happened throughout the Workers Party's cycle of governments. This paper presents the early systematization of part of the studies of this agenda, aiming to demonstrate how much this literature has advanced in the analysis of the mutual constitution between civil society and the State in order to understand the elaboration and implementation processes of public policies. The works analyzed here were produced by a network of research centers that, since 2014, have made the collective effort to study these cases. The results show that this literature has advanced in both directions of the analysis of mutual constitution illuminating, on the one hand, the impacts of this interaction on the production of public policies and, on the other, its effects on social movements. This study also contributes by signaling out paths for future research.

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Author Biography

Adriana Cattai Pismel, Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp)

Doctoral student in Political Science at the State University of Campinas (beginning January 2019). Researcher at the Research Center on Participation, Social Movements and Collective Action (NEPAC / Unicamp). Degree in Social Sciences from the State University of Campinas (2013), with emphasis on Sociology and Political Science. Master in Political Science from the State University of Campinas (2018).

Published

2019-12-31