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Publication Detailed Description
Portuguese revolution of 1974–1975
Book Title
Encyclopedia of social and political movements
Year (definitive publication)
2023
Language
English
Country
United States of America
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Abstract
The structural reasons that caused the Portuguese revolution of 1974–1975 fit neatly
into the general theories of social revolution: an exclusionary and highly repressive
regime, riddled with intense elite conflicts, collapsing under severe military and
financial pressures, and unexpectedly giving way to a series of autonomous radical
and transgressive popular mobilizations and protests. Portugal’s revolution started on
25 April 1974, when a coup by a group of young left-wing middle-rank military officers,
the Armed Forces Movement (MFA), deposed the authoritarian New State regime
(1933–1974), then dealing with a 13-year-old war in its’ African colonies of Angola,
Guinea-Bissau, and Mozambique. The reasons for the coup were at once political and
professional. Not only were the professional officers unhappy with the fact that they
could be overtaken in promotions by noncareer officers, but they believed victory in
the colonial war was impossible. A war with no end in sight, for which the regime
had no solution, and professional grievances combined to set off the 1974 coup. In its
political program, presented soon after the coup, the MFA defended the establishment
of a democratic regime in Portugal.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
Agrarian reform; Civil society; Cultural,organizational,and institutional legacies; Protest; military coup; Social revolution; Transgressive popular protest