A Tale of a Much Maligned but Persistent Cultural Pattern: Networks of People Giving to Receive Something in Exchange*
Sidney M. Greenfield
A chapter in Infrastructure, Morality, Food and Clothing, and New Developments in Latin America, 2021, vol. 41, pp 253-274 from Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:
The paper is the story of the marginalization of the concept of networks of dyadic exchanges or patronage and clientage by Brazilian intellectuals and Brazilianist academics. I contend that though it is a pervasive pattern in the culture of the nation, Brazilian intellectuals wrote about patronage/clientage as an aspect of politics that is responsible for the country's backwardness and underdevelopment. Anthropologists, for the most part, judged it to be exploitative of the people involved and believed that it should be eliminated. The Workers Party (Partido dos Trabalhadoresor PT), as it implemented a highly commended conditional cash transfer program to help the poor, attempted to replace it with an alternative way they believed electoral politics ought to be conducted. I suggest that the pattern continues to be more than exchanges between political office seekers and voters in Brazil as it transcends the political, economic, and religious categories of modernity and may provide the most needy with what the labor market does not.
Keywords: Patronage; clientage; networks of dyadic exchanges; political corruption; ethnography; electoral politics (in Brazil) (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:reanzz:s0190-128120210000041011
DOI: 10.1108/S0190-128120210000041011
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