-
According to
Romero Maura,
Costa and
those who
share his
interpretation view
caciquismo as a
political manifestation of the
economic dominance of
landed and financial...
- rule, caudillismo, and
caciques and
caciquismo. One
Argentine intellectual,
Carlos Octavio Bunge viewed caciquismo as
emerging from
anarchy and political...
-
economic migration. He is
particularly critical of the
persistence of
caciquismo – the
control exercised by
powerful local figures over the
political process...
-
represented the
entire Spanish world Cruz Artacho,
Salvador (2003). "
Caciquismo y
mundo rural durante la Restauración". In Gutiérrez, Rosa Ana; Zurita...
- Luzón,
Javier Moreno (July 2007). "Political Clientelism, Elites, and
Caciquismo in
Restoration Spain (1875--1923)".
European History Quarterly. 37 (3)...
- (PSOE)
blamed the
Government for
supposed election fraud in
small towns (
caciquismo),
which was
incorrectly supposed to have been
wiped out in the 1900s by...
-
leader who
exercises significant power in the
political system known as
caciquismo, and is
sometimes translated as "Bossism." In
various Austronesian languages...
- ISBN 84-7564-091-5. Maqua,
Javier (2006). "Juan Diego. El malo.
Cosechas del
caciquismo". In
Castro de Paz, José Luis; Pérez Perucha,
Julio (eds.).
Picas en Flandes:...
-
Buganda and the
omukama of Toro
typify the
Ugandan chieftaincy class. El
caciquismo is a
distorted form of
government through which a
political leader has...
- 1–188. ISBN 84-239-8959-3.
Romero Salvador,
Carmelo (2021).
Caciques y
caciquismo en España (1834-2020) (in Spanish).
Prologue by Ramón Villares. Madrid:...