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Citations:Chavismo

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English citations of Chavismo

Chavismo

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  1. 2006, Teo Ballvé, Vijay Prashad, Dispatches from Latin America: Experiments Against Neoliberalism, →ISBN, page 90:
    Through conscious, planned community mobilization and concrete advances in key areas of education, health and housing, Chavismo is currently acting in many capacities as a traditional social movement.
  2. 2011, Javier Corrales, Michael Penfold, Dragon in the Tropics: Venezuela and the Legacy of Hugo Chavez, published 2015, →ISBN, page 2:
    But chavismo, the term that is conventionally used to denote the methods and goals of Chávez's particular type of hybrid regime, exhibits three additional features that are less typical of other similar experiences in Latin America.
  3. 2019 February 22, Nadja Drost, “Why Venezuela’s Chavistas are fiercely loyal to Maduro, despite economic crisis”, in PBS[1], retrieved 2021-06-21:
    Many Venezuelans continue to credit Chavismo with redistributing the country's oil wealth through social programs, and giving the poor a voice in Venezuelan politics. But the economic crisis has been a crisis for Chavismo support.
  4. 2021 February 17, “Chavista Government or Chavismo movement? (Listen: This Is Hell)”, in Monthly Review[2]:
    The Chavista government of Maduro lost its popularity, so the revolution, one would assume, would be over, abandoned as a utopian folly. In reality Chavismo endures and lives on as many still engage in the Bolivarian revolution.

Chavism, Chavezism (anglicized variants)

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  1. 2018 July 27, David Harsanyi, “Sorry If You're Offended, but Socialism Leads to Misery and Destitution”, in Reason[3]:
    It's true that not all socialism ends in the tyranny of Leninism or Stalinism or Maoism or Castroism or Ba'athism or Chavezism or the Khmer Rouge—only most of it does.
  2. 2019 March 22, Ignacio Marín, “Venezuela's revolution of hunger: a photo essay”, in The Guardian[4]:
    So, now, even the barrios, the strongholds of the chavismo (chavezism), are somehow revolting against Maduro’s government.
  3. 2021 May 19, Inés Santaeulalia, Florantonia Singer, “Apathy, sanctions, Biden: the stakes creating momentum in Venezuela’s long-running crisis”, in El País[5]:
    The departure from office of former US president Donald Trump, who was at the heart of the strategy to break the Venezuelan government with economic sanctions, has opened a new window of opportunity for Chavism, the political movement that follows the ideas of former president Hugo Chávez.