Hugo Celso Felipe Mansilla2026-03-222026-03-22201310.5209/rev_noma.2013.v37.n1.42564https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_noma.2013.v37.n1.42564https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/62628Actual populist regimes (like those in Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Venezuela) disseminate an ideology of radical change, but in many aspects they reproduce authoritarian and premodern elements of the ancient indigenous civilizations and of the Spanish colonial time. The result is the repetition of old conventions: the consolidation of the political culture of authoritarianism, the formation of very privileged elites (which build now the upper classes), and the desinstitutionalization of public and political life.esAuthoritarianismIdeologyHumanitiesIndigenousPoliticsColonialismConsolidation (business)Political scienceLatin AmericansAspectos conservadores en los modelos latinoamericanos del cambio radical. Un ensayo interpretativo sobre el arraigo del populismoarticle