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E-raamat: Contesting Austerity: Social Movements and the Left in Portugal and Spain (2008-2015)

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Protest and Social Movements
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040780077
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Protest and Social Movements
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040780077

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Contesting Austerity compares the contentious responses to austerity in Portugal and Spain between 2008 and 2015. While in Spain a sustained wave of mobilisation lasted for three years and led to a transformation of the party system, in Portugal social movements mobilised only in specific instances, trade unions dominated protest and institutional change was limited. Contesting Austerity shows that trajectories and outcomes in these countries are linked to the nature and configurations of the players in the mobilisation process.

Arvustused

Contesting Austerity is a landmark work. Its innovative perspective highlights how the distinct political cultures of Spain and Portugal shaped reactions to the crisis. A must-read for all interested in Iberian politics and society., . Pedro Ramos Pinto, Associate Professor in International Economic History, University of Cambridge,

Contesting Austerity brings new insights into how movements and parties interacted in Spain and Portugal during the 'age of austerity'. Anyone interested in understanding the effect of protest in these cases, and more generally in the post-2008 period, can do no better than to turn to this outstanding book., . David. J. Bailey, Senior Lecturer, Department of Political Science and International Studies, University of Birmingham,

This book investigates the Spanish and Portuguese protest cycle in times of austerity. It brings back into social movement studies a debate on capitalism filling a gap in existing literature. With a dynamic view of a complex process in unsettled times, it contributes to the understanding of how the financial crisis and ensuing crisis of legitimacy opened spaces for contentious actors., . Donatella della Porta, Director of Centre on Social Movements Studies, Scuola Normale Superiore

Acronyms 11(2)
Acknowledgments 13(4)
Introduction 17(26)
Starting point
17(2)
The contentious politics of neoliberalism
19(3)
European crisis
22(3)
The politics of austerity in the Southern European countries
25(3)
Contesting austerity in Southern Europe
28(4)
Contesting austerity: social movements and the left
32(11)
1 Cycles, arenas and claims
43(22)
A players-based approach Cycles of protest, political opportunity structures and eventful protests
44(4)
Blurring the lines: a multi-player perspective
48(4)
Repertoires, discourses and claim-making
52(4)
Research design, methods and data collection
56(9)
2 Preludes to the anti-austerity mobilisations From Democratisation to the Great Recession
65(26)
Contentious transitions
65(2)
Contention under consolidating democracies
67(7)
New millennium contentious transitions
74(5)
Anti-austerity antecedents (2005-2010)
79(6)
Diverging paths to the anti-austerity cycle of protest
85(6)
3 Turning points Going beyond the core
91(26)
Setting the scene for austerity
91(3)
Networks and players
94(1)
Turning points in Portugal
95(5)
Turning points in Spain
100(1)
Going beyond the core: a summary
101(1)
Between democracy, precarity and austerity: movement culture and frames
102(7)
Networks of resistance
109(4)
Opening the way forward
113(4)
4 Enduring austerity From representation to redistribution
117(34)
Enduring austerity
117(2)
Players and claim-making between 2009-2015
119(6)
Overlapping dynamics of contention in Spain
125(1)
Mareas as a hybrid: between social movements and trade unions
126(4)
Housing, civil disobedience and relation with Institutions
130(3)
Recentralisation, platforms and protest events: post-15M dynamics
133(3)
Labour from below
136(1)
From movement void to strategic alliance building in Portugal
137(1)
Trade unions and movement void
137(2)
Constitutional break and the QSLT -- Alliance building and exclusions
139(4)
Claim-making and repertoires in the QSLT
143(2)
Demobilisation
145(1)
A plural arena
146(5)
5 From the streets to institutions
151(28)
Reconfiguration of the left after the anti-austerity mobilisations Dynamics of demobilisation
151(4)
Reshaping the left: between party elites and social movements
155(2)
Breaking hegemony: Podemos and the party-constellation
157(1)
Municipal projects: the case of Madrid
158(2)
Podemos, IU and the recomposition of the left
160(5)
The road to the general elections and the party-constellation
165(1)
Resilience and the recomposition of the left in Portugal
166(2)
Left Bloc from 2011 to 2015: crisis, internal dynamics and re-shaping of the Left in Portugal
168(2)
From Congresso Democratico das Alternativas to a recomposition of the left
170(3)
Political outcomes and post-2015 alliances
173(6)
Conclusion
179(12)
Appendices
191(18)
Appendix I Chronology
191(12)
Appendix II Interviews
203(2)
Appendix III Protest Event Analysis Codebook
205(4)
Bibliography 209(16)
Index 225
Tiago Carvalho holds a PhD in Sociology (University of Cambridge). He is a researcher at the Centre for Research and Studies in Sociology (University Institute of Lisbon), and a member of Centre on Social Movement Studies.