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Bolivarianism (Chavismo), as stated, 20th c.-present

20th Century · stated scope

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Bolivarianism, also called Chavismo, is a political ideology originating in Venezuela that combines references to the 19th-century independence leader Simón Bolívar with elements of Latin American nationalism, socialism, and anti-imperialism. It emerged as a formal political movement in Venezuela in the 1990s under Hugo Chávez and became the governing ideology of Venezuela following his election to the presidency in 1998.

Cluster:Transformative Command

Its loudest feature is a floor across the procedural Principles: Rule of Law & Consistency, Transparency & Honesty, Inclusiveness & Pluralism, and Non-Maleficence all strongly depressed, with Authority & Hierarchy elevated. Existing constraints give way to directed change.

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The Three Axes (Detail)

Each bar is one pole’s pull, pointing the way it pushes the result. The dot is where the two pulls add up.