How Covid Changed Latin America

Issue Date January 2025
Volume 36
Issue 1
Page Numbers 109–122
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Covid-19 was a pressure test for democracy in Latin America. The pandemic hit the region harder than any other in the world, particularly in terms of covid death rates and rising poverty. The pandemic also created opportunities to consolidate and abuse power, resulting in selective human-rights repression, power grabs, militarization, and corruption. But the effects were not uniformly negative. The pandemic also prompted renewed economic-crisis management, social mobilization, and local checks to central power. Drawing on the experiences of countries such as Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, and Peru, this essay illustrates that although the pandemic strained democratic politics, good pandemic management may have stemmed democratic decay. New forms of mobilization and policy implementation emerged, as well as new openings for political challengers that will shape the coming decade of governance in the region.

About the Authors

Oliver Kaplan

Oliver Kaplan is associate professor of international studies at the University of Denver.

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Michael Albertus

Michael Albertus is professor of political science at the University of Chicago.

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Diana Senior-Angulo

Diana Senior-Angulo is professor and director of International Affairs and External Cooperation at the University of Costa Rica.

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Gustavo Flores-Macías

Gustavo A. Flores-Macías is professor of government and public policy at Cornell University. He is the author of After Neoliberalism? The Left and Economic Reforms in Latin America (2012).

View all work by Gustavo Flores-Macías

Image Credit: Gustavo Basso via Flickr