Yes, Bolivia’s 2019 election was problematic. Here’s why. Irfan Nooruddin - March 8, 2020 The last 5 percent of the vote count, which favored Morales substantially, is very different from the trendline for the other 95 percent of the count.
Bolivia dismissed its October elections as fraudulent. Our research found no reason to suspect fraud. John Curiel and Jack R. Williams - February 24, 2020 Bolivians will hold a new election in May — without ousted president Evo Morales
This may be the largest wave of nonviolent mass movements in world history. What comes next? Zoe Marks, Tore Wig, Sirianne Dahlum, Sooyeon Kang, Erica Chenoweth, and Christopher Wiley Shay - November 14, 2019 Social media has made mass protests easier to organize — but, perhaps paradoxically, harder to resolve.
Bolivian protesters unseated a president. So why are they still in the streets? Natasha Bennett - November 14, 2019 Evo Morales is out – and it’s not clear what will happen to the institutions he created.
Is Bolivia’s democracy in danger? Here’s what’s behind the disputed presidential election. Santiago Anria and Jennifer Cyr - October 30, 2019 Yes, Evo Morales is ignoring some constitutional limits. But he has also brought previously excluded groups into power.
We checked 100 years of protests in 150 countries. Here’s what we learned about the working class and democracy. Tore Wig, Sirianne Dahlum, and Carl Knutsen - October 24, 2019 The success of mass protests depends on who is doing the protesting.