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Articles

Vol. 40 No. 2 (2020)

Chile’s 2019 October Protests and the Student Movement: Eventful Mobilization?

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2020005000106
Submitted
August 28, 2020
Published
2020-08-28

Abstract

A wave of massive, at times violent, protests raged in Chile from October to December of 2019, opening new possibilities for the country’s politics. This paper
investigates to what extent these events affected the organization, identity, and strategies of a pivotal actor in the cycle and, for the past two decades, an important
driver of domestic political change: the student movement. Based on a qualitative analysis of media coverage and in-depth interviews with key student movement
figures, it argues that, although the events in question were a national turning point, they did not necessarily constitute a critical juncture for the student movement.
In explaining this somewhat paradoxical outcome, the paper supports the established view that the transformative impact of protest events on social movements
depends on the strength of the movement’s organization and the character of its protest repertoires. In addition, it also highlights that some factors overlooked
by the broader social movement literature —including the eventfulness of antecedent mobilization and the locus of protest—mediate the consequences of
protest events on the movements involved.

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