Based on ethnographic fieldwork in a shantytown in the outskirts of Buenos Aires, this article studies the workings of Peronist "political clientelism" among the urban poor. It analyzes the web of relations that some slum-dwellers establish with local political brokers to obtain medicine, food, and solutions to other everyday concerns. The article also explores the main functions of the "problem-solving networks," which are resource control and information hoarding, and pays particular attention to an underexplored dimension of the operation of clientelism: clients'own views on the network.
CITATION STYLE
Auyero, J. (2000). THE LOGIC OF CLIENTELISM IN ARGENTINA: An Ethnographic Account. Latin American Research Review, 35(3), 55–81. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0023879100018653
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