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Political cultures and transnational social fields: Chileans,Colombians and Canadian activists in Toronto
Authors:PATRICIA LANDOLT  LUIN GOLDRING
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, University of Toronto, Canada landolt@utsc.utoronto.ca;2. Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto, Canada goldring@yorku.ca
Abstract:We offer an institutional analysis of Chilean and Colombian transnational politics in Toronto to account for cross‐group variation in transnational political practices and the formation of different types of transnational social fields of political action. The article is based on interviews conducted with Chilean and Colombian community activists and Canadian refugee rights and social justice activists. We use the concept of political culture to account for differences in Chilean and Colombian transnational politics and to explain the different kinds of relationships the two groups have developed with non‐migrants. We introduce the concept of activist dialogues, understood as patterns of strategic political interaction between groups, to characterize how migrants and non‐migrants read and navigate their interlocutors' ways of doing politics. We argue that variation in the character of activist dialogues results in different types of transnational social fields of political action. Chilean–Canadian activist dialogues reflect a convergence of political cultures and strategies of action; Colombian–Canadian activist dialogues are marked by a relationship in which there is a divergence of strategies of action. Convergent dialogues produce thicker and more stable transnational social fields. Divergent dialogues are associated with a series of ad hoc initiatives, the absence of stable and strongly institutionalized partnerships, and a thinner transnational social field of political action.
Keywords:POLITICAL CULTURE  ACTIVIST DIALOGUES  TRANSNATIONAL POLITICS  REFUGEES  LATIN AMERICANS  CANADA
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