<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0121-5612</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Colombia Internacional]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[colomb.int.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0121-5612</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Departamento de Ciencia Política y Centro de Estudios Internacionales. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de los Andes]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0121-56122011000100004</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Everyday Wars of Position: Social Movements and the Caracas Barrios in a Chávez Era]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[Las guerras cotidianas de la posición: Los movimientos sociales y los barrios de Caracas en la era Chávez]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Fernandes]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Sujatha]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Queens College  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Nueva York ]]></addr-line>
<country>Estados Unidos</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>01</month>
<year>2011</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>01</month>
<year>2011</year>
</pub-date>
<numero>73</numero>
<fpage>71</fpage>
<lpage>90</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0121-56122011000100004&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0121-56122011000100004&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0121-56122011000100004&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This article identifies the ways that urban social movements in Caracas have sought to engage the hybrid state during the presidency of radical leftist leader Hugo Chávez. Chávez's election has created avenues for previously disenfranchised groups to participate in gover-nance and decision-making. The structures and discourses of exclusion are being contested in multiple arenas since Chávez has come to power. But, what lines of conflict are emerging as barrio-based movements demand inclusion in the state? In this article, I argue that as urban movements engage with the political arena, they come up against the instrumental rationalities-both liberal and neoliberal-of state administrators. Barrio-based social movements counter the utilitarian logics of technocrats with alternative visions based in "lo cotidiano" &#40;the everyday&#41;, local culture and historical memory. We need to combine Foucault's insights about the operation of power through governmentality with Gramsci's insistence on practical politics, in order to account more fully for the contested nature of power. In this article, I suggest the reframing of a Gramscian notion of hegemony in a positive sense as "everyday wars of position," to think about the quotidian and subterranean spaces where technocrats are confronted with alternative visions from below. I use the example of com-munity media in Caracas to illustrate the ways that social movements engage with the state.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[El artículo identifica las formas como los movimientos sociales urbanos de Caracas han buscado articularse al Estado híbrido durante la presidencia del líder radical de izquierda Hugo Chávez. La elección de Chávez ha creado vías para que participen grupos que antes estaban marginados del gobierno y la toma de decisiones. Las estructuras y los discursos de exclusión se están disputando en varios escenarios desde que Chávez llegó al poder. ¿Pero qué líneas de conflicto emergen cuando los movimientos barriales exigen inclusión en el Estado? En este artículo se sostiene que los movimientos urbanos, conforme se articulan con los escenarios políticos, se encuentran con las racionalidades instrumentales, tanto liberales como neoliberales, de los administradores del Estado. Los movimientos barriales responden a la lógica utilitarista de los tecnócratas con visiones alternativas basadas en lo cotidiano, la cultura local y la memoria histórica. Es necesario combinar las observaciones de Foucault sobre el funcionamiento del poder a través de la gubernamentalidad con la insistencia de Gramsci en la política práctica para dar cuenta por completo de la naturaleza controvertida del poder. En este artículo se sugiere una reformulación de la noción gramsciana de hegemonía en un sentido positivo como "guerras cotidianas de la posición" para pensar en los espacios cotidianos y subterráneos en donde los tecnócratas son confrontados con visiones alternativas desde abajo. Uso el ejemplo de los medios comunitarios de Caracas para ilustrar la forma como los movimientos sociales se articulan con el Estado.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[barrios]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[social movements]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[hybrid State]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[community media]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[barrios]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[movimientos sociales]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Estado híbrido]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[medios comunitarios]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="verdana" size="2">       <p align="center"><font face="verdana" size="4"><b>Everyday Wars of Position Social  Movements and the Caracas Barrios in a Ch&aacute;vez Era</b></font></p>      <p>Sujatha Fernandes<sup><a name= "s*" href="#*">*</a></sup></p>       <p><sup><a name= "*" href="#s*">*</a></sup> Sujatha Fernandes es profesora asistente de Sociolog&iacute;a en el Queens College y el  Graduate Center de la Universidad de la Ciudad de Nueva York, Nueva York,  Estados Unidos. <a href="mailto:sujathaf@yahoo.com">sujathaf@yahoo.com</a> </p>  <hr>      <p><b>Abstract</b></p>      <p>This article identifies the ways that urban social movements in  Caracas have sought to engage the hybrid state during the presidency of radical  leftist leader Hugo Ch&aacute;vez. Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s election has created avenues for previously  disenfranchised groups to participate in gover-nance and decision-making. The  structures and discourses of exclusion are being contested in multiple arenas  since Ch&aacute;vez has come to power. But, what lines of conflict are emerging as  barrio-based movements demand inclusion in the state? In this article, I argue  that as urban movements engage with the political arena, they come up against  the instrumental rationalities-both liberal and neoliberal-of state  administrators. Barrio-based social movements counter the utilitarian logics  of technocrats with alternative visions based in &quot;lo cotidiano&quot; &#40;the  everyday&#41;, local culture and historical memory. We need to combine Foucault&#39;s  insights about the operation of power through governmentality with Gramsci&#39;s insistence  on practical politics, in order to account more fully for the contested nature  of power. In this article, I suggest the reframing of a Gramscian notion of  hegemony in a positive sense as &quot;everyday wars of position,&quot; to think  about the quotidian and subterranean spaces where technocrats are confronted  with alternative visions from below. I use the example of com-munity media in  Caracas to illustrate the ways that social movements engage with the state.</p>      <p><b>Keywords</b>    <br>   barrios &bull; social movements &bull; hybrid State &bull; community media</p>    <hr>      <p align="center"><font face="verdana" size="3"> <b>Las  guerras cotidianas de la posici&oacute;n Los movimientos sociales y los barrios de  Caracas en la era Ch&aacute;vez</b></font></p>      <p><b>Resumen</b></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>El art&iacute;culo identifica las formas como los movimientos sociales  urbanos de Caracas han buscado articularse al Estado h&iacute;brido durante la  presidencia del l&iacute;der radical de izquierda Hugo Ch&aacute;vez. La elecci&oacute;n de Ch&aacute;vez  ha creado v&iacute;as para que participen grupos que antes estaban marginados del  gobierno y la toma de decisiones. Las estructuras y los discursos de exclusi&oacute;n  se est&aacute;n disputando en varios escenarios desde que Ch&aacute;vez lleg&oacute; al poder. &iquest;Pero  qu&eacute; l&iacute;neas de conflicto emergen cuando los movimientos barriales exigen  inclusi&oacute;n en el Estado? En este art&iacute;culo se sostiene que los movimientos  urbanos, conforme se articulan con los escenarios pol&iacute;ticos, se encuentran con  las racionalidades instrumentales, tanto liberales como neoliberales, de los  administradores del Estado. Los movimientos barriales responden a la l&oacute;gica  utilitarista de los tecn&oacute;cratas con visiones alternativas basadas en lo  cotidiano, la cultura local y la memoria hist&oacute;rica. Es necesario combinar las  observaciones de Foucault sobre el funcionamiento del poder a trav&eacute;s de la  gubernamentalidad con la insistencia de Gramsci en la pol&iacute;tica pr&aacute;ctica para  dar cuenta por completo de la naturaleza controvertida del poder. En este  art&iacute;culo se sugiere una reformulaci&oacute;n de la noci&oacute;n gramsciana de hegemon&iacute;a en  un sentido positivo como &quot;guerras cotidianas de la posici&oacute;n&quot; para  pensar en los espacios cotidianos y subterr&aacute;neos en donde los tecn&oacute;cratas son  confrontados con visiones alternativas desde abajo. Uso el ejemplo de los  medios comunitarios de Caracas para ilustrar la forma como los movimientos  sociales se articulan con el Estado.</p>      <p><b>Palabras clave</b>    <br> barrios &bull; movimientos sociales &bull; Estado h&iacute;brido &bull; medios comunitarios</p>      <p>Recibido el 29 de noviembre de 2010 y aceptado el 29 de marzo de 2011.</p>  <hr>      <p>Contemporary forms of exclusi&oacute;n in cities such as Caracas are based on  ge-ographies of inequality and marginality that have emerged over decades of  economic crisis and consequent neoliberal policies of privatization,  deregu-lation, and market-based growth. As economic inequalities have  increased, there is a growing segregation of urban space. Communal areas of city  life such as cultural centers have been taken over by malls and other private  interests. Urban  <i>barrio</i> residents have come to  be seen as a threat to the prop-erty and security of the middle classes and, as  such, are subject to greater po-licing. The spaces available for public life  and deliberation have been further reduced through media consolidation, a  process that centralized the media in the hands of a small number of  conglomerates.</p>      <p> Since Hugo Ch&aacute;vez was elected in 1998, he has embraced an anti-neoliberal  and pro-poor agenda, in an attempt to reduce economic and spatial  inequali-ties, create access to public spaces, and give voice to the black and mestizo majority. The Ch&aacute;vez government has  sponsored local cultural and media collectives, passing legislation to  authorize low power radios as an alterna-tive to media conglomerates. In both  his speeches and the new constitution, Ch&aacute;vez has encouraged barrio movements  to carry out occupations of public spaces in the city and of non-responsive  institutions. Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s election has also created avenues for previously  disenfranchised groups to participate in governance and decision-making. The  structures and discourses of exclusion are being contested in multiple arenas  since Ch&aacute;vez has come to power. But what are the lines of conflict emerging as  barrio-based movements demand greater inclusion in the state?</p>     <p> In this paper, I argue that as urban movements engage with the  political arena, they come up against the instrumental rationalities-both  liberal and neoliberal-of state administrators. The economic policy of the Ch&aacute;vez government has been  distinctly anti-neoliberal. Its restructuring of the oil in-dustry has allowed  the government to create protected areas of the economy such as social welfare  which are not subject to market requirements. But the realities of Venezuela&#39;s continued participation in a global market  economy are manifested in a neoliberal  <i>political rationality</i>, present in areas such as culture and communications. Concerned with  securing foreign investment, technocrats in state institutions apply  market-based calculations in these fields. I argue that the disjunctures  between the state goals of fostering mar-ket competition while reducing poverty  produce tensions that barrio-based movements experience in their interactions  with the state and its interme-diaries. Social movements counter the  utilitarian logics of state and party officials with visions based in &quot;<i>lo cotidiano</i>&quot; &#40;the everyday&#41;, cultural heritage, and  historical memory.</p>      <p> This article begins with a discussion of urban segregation and how the  conditions of neoliberal restructuring have given rise to social movements as  important actors in contemporary Venezuela. The second section explores the  development of the &quot;hybrid state&quot; as the anti-neoliberal domestic  poli-cies of the Ch&aacute;vez government encounter the exigencies of a global  capital-ist order. I also look at the ways that neoliberal rationalities have  come to be embedded within state institutions, and I argue that social movements  conflict with those rationalities in a post-neoliberal order. The last section  presents the example of community-based media in Caracas. I draw on  eth-nographic fieldwork, carried out over nine months in Caracas between 2004  and 2007. Shifting our focus from the institutional actors to the state-society  interactions occurring on an everyday level helps to illuminate the workings of  neoliberalism even within an avowedly anti-neoliberal order.</p>      <p><b>URBAN SEGREGATION AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS</b></p>      <p>The <i>barrios</i> of Caracas, like the favelas of Rio de Janeiro,<i> the periferia of Sao Paulo</i>, the <i>poblaciones</i> of Santiago, and the villas of Buenos Aires, are places that have  been formed by exclusion, rural-urban migration, and poverty. An important body  of scholarship emerged in the i9&Oacute;0s to document and under-stand the problematic  of urban segregation that the shantytowns present. Some scholars sought to  challenge what they saw as the &quot;myth of marginal-ity,&quot; debunking the  idea that they were peripheral and marginal to urban life &#40;Perlman 1976&#41;.  Shantytown dwellers, they argued, were integrated into the life of the city and  national politics through clientilist networks guarantee-ing service provision  in exchange for political votes &#40;Ray 1969; Greenbaum 1968&#41; and the struggles of  neighborhood associations to improve their standard of living &#40;Lomnitz 1977&#41;.  Contrary to notions of shantytowns as marginal zones or &quot;cultures of  poverty&quot; &#40;Lewis 1966&#41;, these scholars argued that the urban poor were  capable of social mobility, entrepreneurship, and political participation.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Revisiting these classical theories of marginality four decades later,  a new generation of scholars reflected that the conditions of marginality that  the scholars of the 1960s sought to challenge were being realized in  contem-porary societies &#40;Gonz&aacute;lez de la Rocha  <i>et al</i>. 2004&#41;. Structural adjustment and  neoliberal policies of the 1980s and 1990s produced classical features of  marginality such as unemployment, a growing informal sector and barter economy  &#40;Portes and Hoffman 2003&#41;, as well as social exclusion and violence &#40;Ward  2004&#41;. In addition to producing the <i>conditions</i> of  marginality, with the advance of neoliberal restructuring, the <i>idea</i> of marginality has re-emerged in the  social imaginary of Latin American urban societies. Intensified rural  immigration to the cities, growing poverty and segregation, and rising  in-security has led to the criminalization of poorer sectors, which are seen to  disrupt the order and health of the city &#40;Goldstein 2003, 12-14&#41;. In Caracas,  the poorer areas are generally referred to as the &quot;<i>barrios marginales</i>&quot; &#40;marginal barrios&#41; or &quot;<i>zonas marginales</i>&quot; &#40;marginal zones&#41;. Understanding this new  geography of power and marginality in the city is crucial to understanding how  it may also be the theater for a new kind of politics.</p>      <p>Cities have played a major strategic role in contemporary processes of  social change in Latin America, especially due to the concentration of the  population in cities. According to Saskia Sassen &#40;1998&#41;, from the start of the  1980s the city emerged as an important terrain for new conflicts and claims by  both global capital and the disadvantaged sectors of the population  concentrated in urban areas. As emerging elite classes became increasingly  powerful and transnational under processes of neoliberal restructuring, the  urban informal working class has become the fastest growing class on the planet  &#40;Davis 2006, 178&#41;. Disconnected from the formal economy, lacking structures of  unionization or access to social welfare, and stigmatized by the middle  classes, the &quot;new cities of poverty&quot; are important sites for  political organizing. The burgeoning population of an informal working class  located in shantytowns and shacks on the margins of major cities has  implications for the sociology of protest that have been largely unexplored.</p>      <p>Coming on the heels of James Scott&#39;s characterizations of &quot;micro  politics&quot; as everyday forms of resistance, scholars of Latin America have  provided rich accounts of consciousness and culture among urban shanty dwellers  in a neoliberal era &#40;Goldstein 2003; Ferr&aacute;ndiz 2004; Smilde 2007; Gutmann  2002&#41;. Some have looked at how the emerging urban informal classes adapt new  strategies to confront the retreat of the state and the lack of public  services. In contexts of material hardship, clientilist practices may re-emerge  as a means of survival and problem-solving &#40;Auyero 2001; Arias 2006; Gay 1990&#41;.  As the state retreats from providing security and policing, urban residents step in to administer justice through vigilante lynchings &#40;Goldstein  2003&#41;. But alongside these everyday forms of resistance and survival, there are  also growing spaces for popular participation, where the urban poor have  orga-nized and asserted their rights. It is this kind of social movement  organizing in the barrios of Caracas that I will address in this paper.</p>      <p>Urban social movements in Caracas are extraordinarily variegated and  heterogeneous. Popular movements claim distinct genealogies that include the  clandestine movements against the 1950s military regime, the post-tran-sition  era of guerrilla struggle in the 1960s, the movements against urban  displacement and hunger strikes led by Jesuit worker priests in the 1970s, and  the cultural activism and urban committees of the 1980s and 1990s. There are  militant cadre-based groupings, as well as collectives that operate through  assemblies and mass actions, and cultural groupings based on mu-sic, song, and  dance. These social movements articulate together in &quot;social movement  webs,&quot; defined by Sonia &Aacute;lvarez, Evelina Dagnino and Arturo Escobar &#40;1998,  15&#41; as &quot;ties established among movement organizations, individual  participants, and other actors in civil and political society and the  state.&quot; Urban social movements are distinguished from political parties  and trade unions by their basis in the networks of everyday life, their  location in the space of the <i>barrio</i> rather  than the party office or union hall, and their attempts to establish  independent linkages with the state.</p>      <p>Urban social movements are strongly engaged in cultural politics, a  con-cept that scholars of &quot;new social movements&quot; such as &Aacute;lvarez,  Dagnino, and Escobar, among others, have elaborated. New social movement  theorists go beyond a reductionist concept of politics and political culture as  found in mainstream sociology and some resource mobilization theory to assess  the multiple realms in which dominance is contested &#40;&Aacute;lvarez, Dagnino, and  Escobar, 1998&#41;. Although some scholarship on resource mobilization theory, such  as Sidney Tarrow&#39;s &quot;collective action frames&quot; and Debra Friedman and  Doug McAdam&#39;s &quot;identity incentives,&quot; are concerned with theorizing  cultural processes, others have mostly been concerned with institutional and  struc-tural processes, and how movement demands are processed in institutional  spheres &#40;&Aacute;lvarez, Dagnino, and Escobar, 1998&#41;. Also, while resource  mobiliza-tion theorists often assume the existence of collective identities,  proponents of new social movements theory are interested in the construction  and nego-tiation of identities &#40;Stephen 1997&#41;. The term cultural politics not  only refers to those groups explicitly deploying cultural protest or cultural  forms, it also includes the attempts by social movements to challenge and  redefine the meanings and practices of the dominant cultural order. While some  move-ments are successful at negotiating and processing their demands at the institutional level-which makes them more visible to mainstream  collective action theorists-others are engaged in a cultural politics that  redefines the meaning of political culture, questioning not just who is in  power, but how that power is exercised.</p>      <p><b>THE HYBRID STATE IN A POST-NEOLIBERAL ERA</b></p>      <p>The specific configuration of social forces under Ch&aacute;vez has been  shaped by histories of the developmental and neoliberal state. In order to  comprehend the constraints and obstacles that face social movements as they  construct alternative futures, it is important to outline the history and  nature of the hybrid state that they encounter under Ch&aacute;vez. While Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s  administra-tion has been broadly described as anti-neoliberal, I suggest rather  that it is a post-neoliberal order, one where neoliberalism is no longer the  dominant guiding policy, although it continues to surface in a range of  conflicting ra-tionalities and policies that are brought into an uneasy  coexistence.</p>      <p>As others have pointed out, the historical experiences of state  forma-tion in Venezuela must be understood in relation to the exploitation of  petroleum. Due to its oil largesse, the Venezuelan state differed from other  peripheral states that were structured around the extraction and distribu-tion  of surplus value. For Fernando Coronil &#40;1997, 224&#41;, what distinguished the  Venezuelan state was its organization around the appropriation and distribution  of ground rent. During the period of the 1980s, Venezuelan politicians began to  implement a series of neoliberal reforms that would dramatically redefine the  character of the petrostate. In 1989, newly elected president Carlos Andres  P&eacute;rez railed against the International Monetary Fund &#40;imf&#41; and other international lending  organizations in his inaugura-tion speech on February 2, 1989, and just a few  weeks later he announced a neoliberal packet, known as El Gran Viraje &#40;the Great Turn&#41;. Under pressure from  foreign creditors to implement an iMF-style austerity program, he dis-mantled  protections, deregulated prices, and reduced social spending.</p>      <p>However, the neoliberal narrative about markets as the source of  ad-vancement did not resonate strongly in Venezuela. An early indication of  this was the <i>Caracazo</i>,  a series of protests  and riots which came weeks after P&eacute;rez announced the <i>Gran Viraje</i>. Two subsequent coups, one in February  1992 led by an army colonel Hugo Ch&aacute;vez and another in November led by high  level officers, signaled a continuing rejection of the neoliberal project.  Nearly ten years after the Gran Viraje was  announced, Ch&aacute;vez was elected to office on an anti-neoliberal agenda, with  plans to rewrite the constitution. From the beginning of his tenure in office,  Ch&aacute;vez linked his new develop-ment strategy with a redistribution of the oil  wealth. According to Dick Parker &#40;2005&#41;, the government strengthened the Organization of  Petroleum Exporting Countries &#40;opec&#41;, and  contributing to an increase in oil prices. A few changes were made in the early  years of Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s administration to the internal structure of pdvsa, the state-owned oil company; but,  following participation by oil executives in a work stoppage that preceded the  coup against Ch&aacute;vez in April 2002, and a lockout and dismissal of 18,000  employ-ees in December that year, Ch&aacute;vez took control of the oil company.  Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s language harked back to earlier eras of rentier liberalism, and the  sharing of the oil wealth.</p>      <p>  Although Ch&aacute;vez has consistently drawn strong popular support for his  return to a policy of capturing and redistributing oil rents, his project  con-fronts a new stage of capitalism, where production and accumulation have  been globalized. This has made it harder for individual nations to sustain  in-dependent polities and economies &#40;Robinson 2003, 12-13&#41;. As Coronil &#40;2000&#41;  has noted, the state is torn by its desire to both subsidize gasoline on the  local market and obtain international rents, while maintaining the global  competitiveness of the oil industry. The insertion of Venezuela into a global  order requires certain policy adjustments and concessions that do not always  fit with the anti-neoliberal rhetoric of Ch&aacute;vez.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>  The debate over whether the Ch&aacute;vez government is pro-neoliberal or  anti-neoliberal has also tended to revolve around its economic policy. Neoliberalism  is typically understood as a set of economic policies that attempt to privatize  and deregulate the economy in order to promote free trade, foreign direct  investment, and export oriented industrialization. Some argue that especially  after 2001, the Ch&aacute;vez administration has pur-sued anti-neoliberal  measures-establishing majority ownership over the oil industry, passing  agrarian reforms, reversing the reduction in social spend-ing, and assigning  resources to health and education that envision universal coverage, despite the  tight constraints of the international context &#40;Parker 2005; Ellner 2008&#41;.  Others contend that the Ch&aacute;vez government has pursued macroeconomic stability  rather than confronting multinational capital &#40;Vera 2001&#41;, and that, despite Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s  rhetoric, there have been no ruptures with foreign creditors or oil clients  &#40;Petras and Veltmeyer 2005, ix&#41;. But, follow-ing Wendy Brown, I argue that we  must look at neoliberalism not just as a set of economic policies, but as a  modern form of power, labeled by Michel Foucault &#40;1991&#41; as  &quot;governmentality.&quot; Governmentality refers to knowledge and techniques  that are concerned with the regulation of everyday conduct &#40;Rose 1999&#41;.  Neoliberal governmentality involves the extension of market rationality, based  on an instrumental calculus of economic utility, to all state practices, as  well as formerly non-economic domains &#40;Brown 2003&#41;.</p>      <p>As Aihwa Ong &#40;2006&#41; has argued, these rationalities and techniques can  predominate, even in contexts where neoliberalism as an economic doctrine is  not central. I suggest that this is the case in Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s Venezuela, a  post-neoliberal formation that has adopted significant anti-neoliberal reforms,  while its ongoing subjection to the requirements of a global economy has given  impetus to neoliberal rationalities and techniques in a range of state and  non-state arenas.</p>     <p>In Venezuela, neoliberal rationalities were deeply etched into the  visions of technocrats who tried to reorganize arenas of public and private  life to meet global competition during the 1990s. Like the Chicago-trained  econo-mists known as the &quot;Chicago boys,&quot; who implemented the  neoliberal turn in Chile, Venezuela also had a group of select, foreign-trained  economists who spearheaded the Gran Viraje. The  Institute of Higher Management Studies &#40;iesa&#41; became  the training ground and platform for a new breed of technocrats, business  elites, and managers who would form the &quot;Venezuelan technocracy.&quot;  Known as the &quot;iesa  boys,&quot; like their  Chilean counterparts, these technocrats had privileged positions in the P&eacute;rez  government, play-ing key roles in public and private enterprises. According to  Miguel Angel Contreras &#40;2006, 52&#41;, the term &quot;technocratic&quot; refers to  a culture of technical decision-making by specialists rather than through a  process of democratic debate and consultation. In the name of fighting  bureaucracy and corruption, state institutions were scaled back and their  operations were often linked to the priorities of the market and international  lending agencies. While some institutions-such as media and cultural  agencies-have undergone changes of personnel and policy under Ch&aacute;vez, they  continue deploying market logics as they appeal to funders and corporations,  even as they pursue their com-mitment to a pro-poor agenda.</p>      <p>A post-neoliberal order is a hybrid state formation that has mounted  certain challenges to the neoliberal paradigm, but which remains subject to the  internal and external constraints of global capital. Some might argue instead  that the Ch&aacute;vez government is &quot;neo-neoliberal,&quot; given its  continu-ities with the past. The Venezuelan economy continues to be dependent  on a boom-bust cycle of fluctuating oil rents and an export-oriented model of  development. It faces unfavorable external conditions due to the strength of  fiscal austerity policies across the rest of the continent. Despite the  rhetoric of Ch&aacute;vez, it is unclear whether his policies are actually creating an  anti-neoliberal challenge that could counter the influence of the US or the  strength of the global market &#40;Albo 2006&#41;. But at the same time, the Ch&aacute;vez  government&#39;s policies of land and resource redistribution, social welfare  intervention, and restructuring of trade to promote joint ventures and &quot;fair trade&quot; bilateral agreements are incompatible with  a neoliberal agenda. As the financial resources and influence of the imf have entered into decline, Venezuela has  offered alternative sources of credit to countries like Argentina to pay off  their debt &#40;Weisbrot 2008&#41;. Ch&aacute;vez has nationalized the telephone company cantv, the steel maker sidor, regionalized electricity companies, the  remaining privately controlled oil fields, and foreign cement companies.  Although these nationalizations were fairly moderate in that they reversed  privatizations that took place under previous governments, or gave the state  majority rather than minority stakes, they were symbolically important and  financially lucrative for the state &#40;Wilpert 2007, 221-223&#41;. The Venezuela case  contains both continuities and ruptures with the past. For the most part, new  policies and orientations are being fashioned from within neoliberal state  institutions, bounded by but also reshaping those institutions. The  &quot;post&quot; in post-neoliberal does not intend to imply that  neoliber-alism has been superseded, but rather that the state is grappling with  the legacy of neoliberalism, responding to and at times providing alternatives  to the neoliberal model.</p>     <p>In contrast to the notion that neoliberalism is a set of economic  reforms that were adopted uniformly across third world debtor nations, there is  a growing sense that neoliberalism is a &quot;moving target, subject to  hybridiza-tions&quot; &#40;Craig and Porter 2006, 21&#41; and consists of  &quot;different rationalities and techniques, often working at odds with each  other&quot; &#40;Ong 2006, 95&#41;. Neoliberal governmentality is just one modality of  power working among others. In Venezuela under Ch&aacute;vez, neoliberal rationality  fuses with rentier liberalism in the contours of a hybrid state formation. The  task of ethnog-raphy is to identify the scope of liberal and neoliberal logics  as they come into collision with new forms of collective action. It is often  the disjunctures between anti-neoliberal rhetoric and market-based  rationalities that open a space for critique by social movements.</p>      <p>This raises the specter of not just a post-neoliberal order, but a  post-neoliberal social imaginary, where alternative visions are being put on  the agenda by social movements. According to Alejandro Grimson and Gabriel  Kessler &#40;2005, 191&#41;, the post-neoliberal imaginary refers to the new  contesta-tory narratives and forms of collective action that are dislodging  neoliberal-ism from its quasi-hegemonic position. As Nancy Postero &#40;2007&#41; has  argued, the emergence of alternative and collective responses to neoliberalism  shows the limitations of theories of neoliberal governmentality, which have  tended to focus mainly on the production of consent to regimes of structural adjust-ment.  We need to supplement Foucault&#39;s insights about dispersed forms of governance  with Gramsci&#39;s insistence on practical politics and the negotiation of hegemony from below, in order to account more fully for the  contested na-ture of power. While some scholars argue that Foucaultian and  Gramscian perspectives as top down interpretations of power are incompatible  due to their vastly different models of causality and agency &#40;Barnett 2005&#41;, I  find it more fruitful to hold them in tension with one another &#40;Mallon 1994&#41;,  espe-cially if one embraces an alternative interpretation of Gramscian hegemony  as promoting struggle rather than consent &#40;Roseberry 1994&#41;.</p>      <p><b>EVERYDAY WARS OF POSITION</b></p>      <p> Just as in earlier eras of Venezuelan politics, class struggle in the  Ch&aacute;vez era has centered on the state and access to the state. The difference  with earlier periods is that the unifying nature of the state as a force that  claimed to stand above and bring together different classes has been disrupted  with the appearance of a polity divided by race and class &#40;Coronil 2000&#41;.  Sectors of the poor and marginalized majority have aligned themselves with  Ch&aacute;vez in order to wrest control of the state-and its considerable oil  resources- away from the hands of multinationals and the privileged,  transnational elites. Ongoing struggles for control over the state apparatus  include the general elections of 1998, Ch&aacute;vez&#39;s standing for re-election in  1999 under a new constitution, and the general elections of 2006, as well as responses  from the opposition which has orchestrated both a coup in April 2002 and an  attempt to legally remove Ch&aacute;vez from office through a recall referendum in  August 2004. Urban social movements were central participants in these battles.</p>      <p> But beyond these larger struggles over the state apparatus, I would  argue that the structures and discourses of exclusion are being contested in a  range of quotidian sites, through everyday wars of position. My formulation  &quot;everyday wars of position,&quot; combines Antonio Gramsci&#39;s term with  James Scott&#39;s concept of &quot;everyday forms&quot; of resistance and &quot;lo cotidiano,&quot; &#40;the ev-eryday&#41; invoked by social  movements themselves, in order to describe the multiple battles that they have  participated in daily on numerous fronts. Although Gramsci &#40;1971&#41; was concerned  with hegemony in a negative sense as domination, he was also interested in  hegemony in a positive sense, look-ing at how subordinate populations employ  wars of position to remake their material and social worlds. Gramsci used the  military metaphor &quot;wars of position&quot; to describe political struggle  between classes. In contrast to the Leninist notion of a vanguard party which  would lead the working classes to victory, Gramsci saw conflict as being fought  out in the trenches of society, where incremental changes could help to shift  the relation of the forces in conflict and build counter-hegemonies.</p>      <p>One battlefield opened up on the level of media and access to  information. Cutbacks to the public sector had involved substantial  deregulation of the media: P&eacute;rez and subsequent presidents had expanded  concessions to media corporations, leading to the centralization of the media  in a small number of private conglomerates. According to Elizabeth Fox and  Silvia Waisbord &#40;2002, 12&#41;, the Venezuelan media market is dominated by  Venevisi&oacute;n and tvc,  which receive the  biggest share of advertising revenues and have the largest audiences. Private  television at a national level was monopolized by the Cisneros group  &#40;Venevisi&oacute;n&#41; and the 1BC group of Phelps-Granier &#40;Radio Caracas Televisi&oacute;n&#41;.  Out of 44 regional television networks, nearly all are linked to private  networks such as Venevisi&oacute;n, Radio Caracas Televisi&oacute;n,<sup><a name= "s1" href="#1">1</a></sup> Televen, and  Globovisi&oacute;n. Of these groups, Cisneros, Phelps, and Televen receive 70 percent  of all television advertising revenues &#40;Mayobre 2002, 182&#41;. This small group of  corporations also controls radio-electric spaces and the national press.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Telecommunications were seen as a cornerstone of neoliberal policy and  crucial to attracting investors in all sectors of the economy. In October 1991,  a new Law of Telecommunications was passed, which sought to stimulate private  investment in communications and deregulate media services. The law created a  new autonomous regulatory body called the National Commission of  Telecommunications &#40;conatel&#41;,  which had the technical  functions of as-signing frequencies, granting concessions and permits, and  applying admin-istrative sanctions.<sup><a name= "s2" href="#2">2</a></sup> Given the neoliberal climate  that favored free markets and a user-pays system, conatel was also given the task of promoting  competition in the telecommunications sector. These technical responsibili-ties  and competition-related tasks combined to make conatel a powerful instrument for policing the  airwaves and enforcing the new regulatory re-gime in the interests of private  media corporations and commercial stations.</p>     <p>Since Ch&aacute;vez was elected president in 1998; especially in the tense  days of the oil strikes by business sectors in December 2001 and during the  lead-up to the coup in April 11-13, 2002, the private media ran a fierce  campaign to discredit Ch&aacute;vez. On April 11, 2002, the opposition took the  government-owned station Channel 8 off the air, the mass media falsely  broadcast that Ch&aacute;vez had resigned, and then the private media ran its regular  broadcast with no further information. Community radio and print media played  an important role in releasing news about the coup and restoring Ch&aacute;vez  to power on April 13. For many this was a wakeup call to develop their own  local forms of media in the face of corporate consolidation and ownership of  mass media.</p>      <p>By the middle of 2005, there were over 300 community radio stations  operating across the country. Many of these stations had their origins in  long-term social movements such as  <i>Macarao y su Gente</i> in the parish of Macarao, the <i>Coordinadora Sim&oacute;n Bol&iacute;var</i> in 23 de Enero, or the movement of community media started by  community activists in Caricuao and La Vega in the early 1990s. Community radio  collectives took advantage of their high locations to compete with mass media  for airspace, and they made creative use of text messages, internet, and local  networks of communication to build up a following. The idea that media should  be locally managed, collectively owned, and facilitate a plurality of voices  and viewpoints was counter to the homogenization and concentration of media  that had occurred as a result of media deregulation and privatization. In their  battles with the opposi-tion and the private media, urban social movements  allied themselves with Ch&aacute;vez. The Ch&aacute;vez administration also sought to bolster  these movements. Following the coup in 2002, Ch&aacute;vez gave substantial money  towards the development of community radio stations.</p>      <p>But closer collaboration between these media-based social movements  and the state brought into relief the contradictions of the hybrid state.  Communications policy under Ch&aacute;vez continues to be oriented towards a global  market as the sector seeks to attract foreign finance and investment. The field  of telecommunications has experienced significant growth and foreign  investment since 1999. This is partly due to the expansion of areas such as  land-line telephone services, cell phones, wireless services, and internet and  satellite services. Overall revenues for the telecommunications sector in 2007  were usd 8.64 billion. Income from the  telecommunications sector is a major contributor to Gross National Product &#40;gnp&#41;; in 1997, it represented 2.3 percent of gnp and by 2007 it had grown to 4.26 percent  of gnp. State agencies structure the field of  telecommunications to continue to attract foreign and private capital,  regulating the field to provide a stable environment for private investors,  while at the same time enhancing equity and universal access.</p>      <p>One area where these competing interests are manifested is in the Law  of Telecommunications passed in 2000 under Ch&aacute;vez. The 2000 law bore strong  similarities to its predecessor in 1991, and to the 1996 Telecommunications Act  passed in the US, which sought to lift media regulations and owner-ship  restrictions, promote free competition among media providers, and reduce the interventionist role of the government &#40;McChesney 2004,  51&#41;. The language of the 2000 law passed under Ch&aacute;vez reiterates these concerns  of free competition and it minimizes the idea of government as representa-tive  of the public interest. At the same time, the law promoted the rights of  individuals to establish community television and radio networks, and it gave conatel the authority to grant administrative  authorization to these stations. But the ability of conatel to democratize the field of media was  limited by its continuing need to appeal to and protect corporate media  in-terests as a condition of growth and investment.</p>      <p>Following the 2000 Law of Telecommunications, community media  orga-nizations sought inclusion in the drafting of legislation pertaining to  media, and in 2002 several groups participated in a process of debate as to the  Regulation of Open Community Public Service Radio and Television. In or-der to  gain authorization, conatel  proposed that community  radio stations meet requirements in four fields: social, legal, technical, and  economic. The social  aspect requires an  analysis of the social conditions and necessities of the community; the legal component is related to the registration  of the com-munity radio or television station as a foundation; the technical part requires a study by conatel of the radio spectrum and the assignation  of a frequency to the station; while the economic analysis  involves a study of the local market to assess the possibility of  self-sustainability. Community media activists welcomed certain aspects of the  Regulation, such as the promotion of self-financing, which would contribute to  the autonomy of radio stations and the stimulation of local businesses which  advertised on the radio. But at the same time, members of radio stations Radio  Perola, Radio Negro Primero, Radio Macarao and others which were involved in  drafting the authorization procedures voiced criticisms of the neoliberal  rationalities involved. Media collectives were to be structured along the lines  of corporations; they had to present their projects in instrumental terms of  resolving problems in the community, and were asked to justify the benefits and  returns of investment in their project. In contrast to the language of  statistics and diagnosis, they put forth a strong, community based vision of  what validates an alternative radio station. They opposed what they saw as an  instrumental neoliberal rationality of utility, and they rejected a  technocratic analysis of the social.</p>      <p>One of the major areas of contention in the drafting of the  authoriza-tion procedures was the legal components. Article 12 of the  Regulation says that in order to present themselves for authorization, a  community radio or television station must form a &quot;foundation,&quot; with  a board of directors, and a General Director. The language borrows from broader  neoliberal de-velopment discourses of international agencies and private  funders, that have sought to refashion community organizations along the lines of  cor-porations. Rafael Hern&aacute;ndez from Radio Macarao argued that the corporate  model of a board of directors, which is responsible for running the  organiza-tion and making decisions, goes against the collective and  non-hierarchical forms of decision-making that some of the community radio  stations are trying to build. Carlos Carles from Radio Perola said that they  would prefer a general Coordinating Committee or an Assembly as the highest  decision-making authority, rather than a General Director. In the legal  component of the authorization procedures, there was a provision for a recall  referendum to revoke the leadership of the station. The &quot;community&quot;  is defined in vague and general language as those who reside in the  neighborhood. Media activ-ists also critiqued this vague definition, saying  that the label of &quot;community&quot; could be appropriated by a group with  specific economic or political interests who want to remove the leadership. For  Rafael, the community must be clearly defined as those who work in the radio,  support it, and attend events, and criticisms should be brought up in  assemblies and meetings.</p>      <p>The social component of the authorization procedures most strongly  reflected the neoliberal rationality of the Regulation. In order to obtain  authorization, the members of the station are asked to justify the media  project in instrumental terms: &quot;Describe the principle necessities, wants,  and existing problems in the community where the service of a community radio  station will be installed and demonstrate the bridge, path, or mecha-nisms that  will be implemented to facilitate the solution of these problems in a positive  manner.&quot; The community radio stations are supported by state institutions  not for their intrinsic value as creations of the community, but in terms of  utilitarian calculations of the returns they will provide. There is no doubt  that the government wants the media to be socially useful to the community, but  this goal of social benefit intersects with other rationalities of cost and  benefit calculation that are being driven by the broader market orientation of  the communications sector. The residents of the neighborhood are imagined in  passive terms: they are &quot;beneficiaries&quot; who will receive the  &quot;services&quot; provided by the station, rather than active participants  in the activities of the station.</p>     <p>As part of the social component, the members of the station are asked  to carry out a &quot;Social Diagnostic,&quot; which consists of the application  of a prede-termined methodological instrument, or a quantitative survey, that  collects data on educational level, occupation, participation, problems and  necessities of the community, and knowledge of the television or radio. The  community radio members are required to collect data in the <i>barrio</i> using this quantita-tive instrument, then  codify and tabulate the data, and finally analyze and interpret their results. As George Y&uacute;dice &#40;2003&#41; has shown, the  requirements for this kind of quantitative data have come from the market  incentives that structure funding bodies. In order to assess the numerous  projects that come to institutions for evaluation and funding, these agencies must  be able to measure the benefits and returns that justify investment in a  project.</p>      <p>Instruments for measuring cultural and community media projects are  modeled after market indicators, which allow economists to measure the health  of the economy and the types of structural interventions that will be required  &#40;Y&uacute;dice 2003, 15-16&#41;. This diagnostic approach conflicts with the approach to  knowledge production among barrio-based media groups. Carlos Carles described  how heated debates arose during meetings over this issue. &quot;They proposed  techniques of demonstrating statistical data,&quot; said Carlos. &quot;Against  this, we proposed local knowledge, oral narrative, historical memory, and the  everyday work of the community.&quot; The approach chosen by the community  media groups highlighted the alternative epistemologies that were emerging from  their community-based work. These criteria were not incorporated into the final  authorization process, which required media collectives to put together a  document of several hundred pages of data. Yet historical memory, everyday  work, and local knowledge constituted an alter-native set of values that  Carlos, Rafael and other media activists continued to appeal to in their  negotiations with bureaucrats.</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b>CONCLUSION</b></p>      <p>Urban social movements must navigate an often complex terrain between  states and markets in a post-neoliberal era. Barrio-based groups in Venezuela  made use of changes in communications technology to start up their own radio  stations. The idea that media should be locally managed, collectively owned,  and facilitate a plurality of voices and viewpoints was counter to the  homogenization and concentration of media that had occurred as a result of  deregulation and privatization under neoliberalism. Community radio stations  flourished as a result of funding and legislation under the Ch&aacute;vez  administration. But as media activists interacted with state agencies, they  came up against the instrumental rationalities of administrators. During the  process of drafting a regulation to authorize community media, the barrio  activists brought out local knowledge, historical memory, and everyday work in  response to the technocratic analysis of the social and quantitative data of  the bureaucrats.</p>      <p>The tensions between these competing visions reflect the contradic-tions  of a revolution fought from within the structures of a neoliberal state  apparatus, as well as Venezuela&#39;s continued subjection to a global market economy. Urban social movements are making demands-for public  space, for inclusion in the state, for social rights, and for a redistribution  of resources-that cannot be accommodated within the framework of the present  order. Pointing to Ch&aacute;vez as their representative within the state, community  activists struggle to identify who the state represents and in whose interests  it is operating. Often they find that it is not the interests of ordinary  people, and this realization is generating a greater impetus towards  self-organization and autonomy.</p>      <p> But on a deeper level, these struggles reveal the continuing  predominance within the Chavista project of Enlightenment notions of progress  and knowl-edge construction which have been historically associated with  colonialism and European capitalism. Arturo Escobar &#40;2010, 11&#41; refers to this  project as one of &quot;alternative modernizations&quot; being pursued by the  new left states of Latin America, in contrast to what he calls  &quot;de-colonial projects&quot; of social movements that present an  alternative to Euro-modernity and consist of a pluriversal set of practices.  Unfortunately Escobar&#39;s substantial treatment of the Venezuela case leaves out  urban popular movements dating back many decades, dealing mostly with current  state-promoted groupings such as the communal councils and claiming erroneously  that &quot;Venezuela has little his-tory of collective action compared to other  Andean countries&quot; &#40;Escobar 2010, 16&#41;.<sup><a name= "s3" href="#3">3</a></sup> But his argument could  be more profoundly illustrated through ethno-graphic explorations of the  politics of everyday life, the fiestas, storytelling, historical memory,  murals, barrio assemblies, and popular radio through which the urban poor make  their presence felt and seek to build alternative kinds of community.</p>      <p>Social justice and political transformation do not depend only on  coming up with new policies and legislation as the Ch&aacute;vez government has done.  Rather, they require generating alternative rationalities to counter the  market-based rationalities that have come to structure political and social  life. By emphasizing local knowledge, oral narrative, and historical memory  against the rationalities of administrators, social movement actors were  for-mulating these alternative visions. Ultimately, this points to the role  played by local actors in mediating and contesting global configurations of  power. While state-society alliances can alter the trajectory of neoliberalism,  state-centric solutions remain subject to the internal and external constraints  of global capital.</p>  <hr>      <p><b>Comments</b></p>      <p><sup><a name= "1" href="#s1">1</a></sup> On May 27, 2007, the Ch&aacute;vez governm ent decided not to renew the  broadcast license for Radio Caracas Televisi&oacute;n &#40;RCTV&#41;. RCTV continued to offer  a paid subscription service via cable and satellite.  </p>      <p><sup><a name= "2" href="#s2">2</a></sup> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vii.org/papers/vene.htm">http://www.vii.org/papers/vene.htm</a>.  </p>      <p><sup><a name= "3" href="#s3">3</a></sup> For a detailed discussion of  the decades-long history and trajectory of urban social movements in Caracas,  see Fernandes 2010.  </p>  <hr>      <p><b>References</b></p>      ]]></body>
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