Artículo de Revista
Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Autor
Morales Quiroga, Mauricio
Profesor Guía
Profesor Tutor
Profesor
Profesor Informante
Autor Institucional
Jefe de Proyecto
Profesor Co-Tutor
Profesor Patrocinante
Profesor Tutor
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
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Chile's perfect storm: social upheaval, COVID-19 and the constitutional referendum
Abstract
Why did one of Latin America's most stable democracies experience a social upheaval that forced the political class to organise a referendum to rewrite the current constitution? To what degree did the COVID-19 pandemic influence the development of the constitutional referendum of October 2020? What institutional paths will open for Chile when the new constitution comes into force? In this article, it is suggested, first, that Chile successfully reduced poverty levels but inequality was reduced more slowly, which contributed to generating discontent with democracy. Second, that Chile has had a long-term crisis of representation, with a rigid party system which partially changed in 2017 due to the implementation of a new electoral system. Third, that in the 2020 constitutional referendum the lower-income sectors - whose COVID 19 infection rates were higher than the rest of the population - surprisingly turned out to vote in greater numbers than in previous elections. Fourth, that Chile is beginning a constitutional process blighted by uncertainty, polarisation and political instability, which will culminate only with the referendum in mid-2022 to approve or reject the new constitution.
Description
Keywords
Constitutional process , Social upheaval , COVID-19|Referendum , Electoral turnout
Citation
DOI
10.1080/21582041.2021.1973677
Nivel de acceso
Acceso Libre
Enlace relacionado
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible
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Artículo indexado en Scopus