TY - CHAP AB - Purpose The Latin American region experienced an electoral shift to the political left during the 2000s but this leftist shift did not radically alter the political economy of the region. Following Jessop’s (2008) strategic-relational approach to theorizing about the state, this paper focuses on the perspective that the structure of the state is both an outcome of prior social struggles and a structuring mechanism for the social actors that attempt to enact political and economic reforms.Methodology/approach After demonstrating what this has historically meant for the types of state that have existed in Latin America during the past century by reviewing some of the literature on the corporatist and bureaucratic-authoritarian states and clientelism, this paper argues that the neoliberal reforms of the 1980s and 1990s constituted a new type of state – the Latin American neoliberal state. This analysis is then focused on the literature that seeks to describe the new lefts in the region, while continuing to focus on the role of the neoliberal state in structuring these new lefts’ terrain of struggle.Findings Understanding the new lefts in Latin America and the types of reforms that they are capable of making requires that we better understand this new type of state. Due to the structural limitations imposed by the neoliberal state, the lefts are not able to radically alter the region’s political economy. VL - 34 SN - 978-1-78560-180-4, 978-1-78560-181-1/0278-1204 DO - 10.1108/S0278-120420150000034006 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/S0278-120420150000034006 AU - Rowland Aaron T. PY - 2015 Y1 - 2015/01/01 TI - The State in Context: Latin America’s New Left and the Legacies of the State T2 - States and Citizens: Accommodation, Facilitation and Resistance to Globalization T3 - Current Perspectives in Social Theory PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 125 EP - 153 Y2 - 2024/04/24 ER -