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All Quiet on the Protest Scene? Repertoires of Contention and Protest Actors During the Great Recession

Authors :
Kriesi, Hanspeter
Lorenzini, Jasmine
Wüest, Bruno
Hausermann, Silja
Hunger, Sophia
Kriesi, Hanspeter
Lorenzini, Jasmine
Wüest, Bruno
Hausermann, Silja
Hunger, Sophia
Source :
Contention in Times of Crisis: Recession and Political Protest in Thirty European Countries; 104-127
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The choice of specific action repertoires allows protesters to increase their visibility and eventually their success. A rise in protest, i.e. a protest wave, often comes with a qualitative expansion of the conflict, which can take two forms: changes in the action repertoire and a growing diversity of involved actors. In this chapter, we examine the types of protest and the types of actors over time. In so doing, we ask whether and how the Great Recession transformed customary action repertoires in southern, north-western, and eastern Europe. Hence, we show variations in the use of commonplace action forms, i.e. demonstrations, strikes, and confrontational and violent actions. We find that demonstrations and strikes remain the dominant form of protest across regions and time periods, while transformations in the action repertoire of contention, in the form of violent events, took place only in some parts of the south and were short lived. Lastly, we turn to actors and we show that protest events increasingly feature social groups without formal organizational structures. We conclude by arguing that contention repertoires remained largely unaffected by the Great Recession; demonstrations were and remained the prevailing form of protest in all three regions during the whole period under study.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Contention in Times of Crisis: Recession and Political Protest in Thirty European Countries; 104-127
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1303886266
Document Type :
Electronic Resource