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ERIGAL is interested in the major social and political transformations taking place in Latin America since the turn of the 21st century, and has developed a program focusing on 3 main areas of research.

ÉRIGAL's research program (2024-2028) is built around three complementary axes

They propose an innovative, holistic approach to thinking about the processes of transforming citizenship regimes through the prism of experiences, practices and relationships built up between citizens and with the state.​

Our approaches

  Innovative

  Holistic

 Research team

Twelve researchers from six academic institutions in three regions (Concordia, McGill, Université de Montréal, ULaval, UQÀM and UQO).

Our approach proposes to decentralize the focus from institutions, public policies and national phenomena in the analysis of citizenship regimes in order to observe their nuances and intersectional dimensions, while integrating local and transnational scales.

LÉRIGAL is as interested in state inclusion policies and formal rights as it is in individual or collective practices in the exercise of active citizenship. The aim is first and foremost to understand these practices, while anchoring them in their political and institutional context. How do they fit together, and what kind of citizenship do they build? Then we look at their relationship with formal, public and state institutions. Do they contribute to the construction of more inclusive citizenship regimes and to democratization from below?

Recognised as specialists in contemporary dynamics of inclusion, citizenship and governance in Latin America, they are well-connected to academic circles in Latin America, Europe and North America.​

The synergy that animates the team’s research agenda stems from the lack of systematic reflection in Quebec on the major social and political transformations that have been taking place since the turn of the 21st century in Latin America. All while the region has been undergoing important socio-political changes for the last three decades and seems to be experiencing a return to conservatism after more than a decade of leftist governance.

In this context, new political and social forces emerge or re-emerge, and major debates have begun on the subjects of democracy and citizenship.