Is Latin America Stuck in the Middle?
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Is Latin America Stuck in the Middle?

Latin American democracies are struggling for one simple reason: The region’s voters are aggrieved, impatient, and eager to elect candidates who offer a break with the past—sometimes whatever that break may be.

This factor, combined with high crime and middling economic growth, has led to wild swings and shrinking political rights. But can the region get itself unstuck?


The Journal of Democracy follows Latin American democracies as they trek this torturous path. The below essays offer a critical, unblinking analysis of what it will take for Latin America to find its way.


Why Latin America's Democracies Are Stuck

Latin American democracies struggle as democratic stagnation makes them targets for illiberal populists and other would-be authoritarians.

By Scott Mainwaring and Anibal Pérez-Li?án


The Danger?of Powerless Democracy

Troubled Peru has devolved into a cautionary tale for what a democracy without established parties and professional politicians can look like.

By Rodrigo Barrenechea and Alberto Vergara


Chile's Constitutional Chaos

Chileans rejected the progressive charter they had claimed to want. Right-wing attacks and voter anxiety are to blame.

By Jennifer M. Piscopo and Peter M. Siavelis


Chile's Failed Constitution: Democracy Wins

Chilean voters overwhelmingly rejected a draft constitution that did not reflect their values. They want a new charter, not a new country.

By Eduardo Alemán and Patricio Navia


Lula's Second Act

Brazil’s charismatic former president is back, but he won by a sliver and his opponents on the right were also empowered by the election.?

By Wendy Hunter and Timothy J. Power


Millennial Authoritarianism in El Salvador

Nayib Bukele combines populist appeals, classic autocratic behavior, and a polished social-media brand to threaten democratic institutions.

By Manuel Mélendez-Sánchez


Latin America's Abortion Rights Breakthrough

A recent wave of wins for abortion rights?in Argentina, Mexico, and Colombia owes its success to framing the issue as a matter of human rights.

By Omar G. Encarnación

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