Description
Book SynopsisRecent years have seen an enormous increase in protests across the world in which citizens have challenged what they see as a deterioration of democratic institutions and the very civil, political and social rights that form the basis of democratic life.
Trade Review"This book, written by one of the foremost theorists of social movements, offers a new way to theorise the complex conjuncture of late neo-liberalism, a 'precariat' that includes the young and educated. and a legitimacy crisis of our political institutions and how this plays out in the squares of Europe, America and the Middle East."
—Mary Kaldor, The London School of Economics
"Scholars of social movements have largely ignored capitalism in recent years, but Donatella della Porta shows how a crisis of neoliberal capitalism has provided the main motives and solidarities for recent protests against economic austerity and political corruption. Hers is a very important and original attempt to bridge political economy and contentious politics."
—Jeff Goodwin, New York University
"Among scholars of contemporary social movements, della Porta is unique in combining inquiry about resources for mobilization, political cleavages, and diverse experiences of neoliberal capitalism.... Highly recommended."
—Choice
"Della Porta's argument is complex, but coherent and convincing. The book helps shed light on the political-economic dimension of anti-austerity protests. The renewed focus on capitalism resonates with the current debate on causes and effects of inequality (for example, Piketty, Stiglitz), and should trigger more research."
—Thomas Mättig, Democratization
"[A]n important novelty in the field of social movement studies. The successful attempt to combine an innovative theoretical framework with a rich and detailed empirical analysis of the recent (and less recent) global waves of protest pushes forward a significant renewal in the analytical toolkit of this discipline and an expansion of its research themes in a hitherto unexplored direction."
—Journal of Economics and Political Economy
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements vi
1 The Re-emergence of a Class Cleavage? Social Movements in Times of Austerity 1
2 Social Structure: Old Working Class, New Precariat, or Yet Something Different? 26
3 Identification Processes: Class and Culture 67
4 Lo Llaman Democracia Y No Lo Es: A Crisis of Political Responsibility 110
5 Democracy Is Not a Spectator Sport: Changing Conceptions of Democracy in Social Movements 157
6 Bringing Capitalism Back into Protest Analysis? Some Concluding Remarks 211
Notes 226
References 228
Index 247