Post by account_disabled on Mar 7, 2024 4:45:06 GMT -6
Unions (Analyzed by Daniel James), the Relatively Autonomous Governors and Provincial Leaders of the Provinces (Studied by Ana María Mustapic), the Decentralized Territorial Militancy (Portrayed by Levitsky Himself) and the Youth Groups That Massively Joined Peronism in the S. That is, the Sectors That Allowed Peronism to Survive Without Perón and That Give It Vitality Even Today Are the Same Ones That Strain the Internal Life of the Frente De Todos. These Tensions, Historically, Have Been Resolved by Leadership. Peronism Was Born as a Movement Linked to a Charismatic Leadership That Managed to Survive the Death of Its Original Leader.
This is Unusual, but Not Impossible. That It Has Survived Without Becoming Completely Bureaucratized, That It Has Preserved a Kind of Serial Need for Charisma. The Literature on Parties Assumes That, in Those Cases in Which a Charismatic Party Manages to Transition Towards an Institutionalized Party Format, It Will Do So by Transforming Into a UK Mobile Database Grayer, More Procedural Organization, Managed by Bureaucrats. This is What Max Weber, Creator of Both the Concept of Charisma and Bureaucratization , Says . Weber Compares Modern Parties With the Catholic Church. Charisma is the Original Miracle: It is Not Planned or Designed. It is Recognized as Such by the Followers or It is Not. Charisma is Self-explanatory and Self-legitimizing. Furthermore.
It is Always Personal and Constitutes the Only Source of What is New in Politics. Charisma is Not Transmitted or Inherited, Says Weber; at Most, It is Sublimated Into Organizational Authority. The Charisma of the Founder Can Be Institutionalized, but No Figure Will Achieve the Authority of the Original Leader. This is Not, However, What Happened With the Justicialista Party. The Original Leadership of Juan Domingo Perón Was Succeeded by a Brief Period of "Disorder" and Collegial Leadership Under the Peronist Organizations, Which Culminated in the Defeat of . The Moment of Refoundation Occurred in , When Carlos Menem Defeated Him in a Primary to the Buenos Aires Governor Antonio Cafiero.
This is Unusual, but Not Impossible. That It Has Survived Without Becoming Completely Bureaucratized, That It Has Preserved a Kind of Serial Need for Charisma. The Literature on Parties Assumes That, in Those Cases in Which a Charismatic Party Manages to Transition Towards an Institutionalized Party Format, It Will Do So by Transforming Into a UK Mobile Database Grayer, More Procedural Organization, Managed by Bureaucrats. This is What Max Weber, Creator of Both the Concept of Charisma and Bureaucratization , Says . Weber Compares Modern Parties With the Catholic Church. Charisma is the Original Miracle: It is Not Planned or Designed. It is Recognized as Such by the Followers or It is Not. Charisma is Self-explanatory and Self-legitimizing. Furthermore.
It is Always Personal and Constitutes the Only Source of What is New in Politics. Charisma is Not Transmitted or Inherited, Says Weber; at Most, It is Sublimated Into Organizational Authority. The Charisma of the Founder Can Be Institutionalized, but No Figure Will Achieve the Authority of the Original Leader. This is Not, However, What Happened With the Justicialista Party. The Original Leadership of Juan Domingo Perón Was Succeeded by a Brief Period of "Disorder" and Collegial Leadership Under the Peronist Organizations, Which Culminated in the Defeat of . The Moment of Refoundation Occurred in , When Carlos Menem Defeated Him in a Primary to the Buenos Aires Governor Antonio Cafiero.