2
0
1
5
revista de pensament i anàlisi
17
ISSN 1130-6149
2015
Activism
and Civil Society:
Broadening Political
Participation
Activismo y
sociedad
Civil
ampliando la
Paul Dekker and
Ramón A. Feenstra (eds.)
ReceRca
Revista de pensament i anÀlisi
núm. 17
activism and civil society:
bRoadening political
paRticipation
activismo y sociedad civil:
ampliando la paRticipación
política
Paul Dekker y ramón a. Feenstra (eds.)
Departament de Filosofia i Sociologia
Any 2015
RECERCA. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi es desde 2014 una publicación semestral (abril y octubre) del
Departamento de Filosofía y Sociología de la Universitat Jaume I de Castellón. Esta revista aplica la revisión
ciega por pares y pretende atraer artículos de primera calidad científica de investigadores nacionales e
internacionales del campo de la filosofía y de la sociología crítica. ReceRca está indexada en Humanities Source
Publications (ebsco), Fuente Académica Premier, Philosopher´s Index, eRih-plus, cindoc (categoría B),
e-revist@s y Latindex.
Direcció: Elsa González Esteban Universitat Jaume I
Ramón A. Feenstra Universitat Jaume I
Secretaria tècnica: Martha Rodríguez Coronel, Daniel Pallarés-Domínguez, Maria
Medina-Vicent, Universitat Jaume I
Edició a càrrec de: Paul Dekker, Tilburg University
Research i Ramón A. Feenstra, Universitat Jaume I
and The Netherlands Institute for Social
Consell redacció: Victoria Camps Cervera, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Adela Cortina
Orts, Universitat de València; John Keane, The University of Sydney; José María García GómezHeras, Universidad de Salamanca; Antonio Ariño Villaroya, Universitat de València; José Félix
Lozano Aguilar, Universitat Politècnica de València; Mercedes Alcañiz Moscardó, Universitat
Jaume I; Domingo García Marzá, Universitat Jaume I; Alfredo Alfageme Chao, Universitat
Jaume I; Salvador Cabedo Manuel, Universitat Jaume I; Emilio Martínez Navarro, Universidad de Murcia y Txexu Ausín Díez, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas –csic–
Consell assessor: Sonia Alonso, Assistant Professor of Government Georgetown University in Qatar;
Fermín Bouza Álvarez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Mauricio Correa Casanova,
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile; Paul Dekker, Universiteit van Tilburg, Países Bajos;
María Das Dores Guerreiro, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, iscte-iul, Portugal; Félix Duque
Pajuelo, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; Joám Evans Pim, Center for Global Nonkilling, United
States; Jerry Hoeg, The Pennsylvania State University, United States; Alain Montaclair, iufm Besançon, Université de France, Francia; Eulalia Pérez Sedeño, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas –csic–; Juana Sánchez Gey, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; Vicente Sanfélix
Vidarte, Universitat de València; José María Tortosa Blasco, Universitat d´Alacant; Ciprian
Valcan, Tibiscus University Timişoara, Rumanía; Sonia Reverter Bañón, Universitat Jaume I y
Delamar José Volpato Dutra, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina –ufsc–
Aquest monogràfic ha rebut el suport del Departament de Filosofia i Sociologia i del projecte d'investigació
«Ética de la democracia: crisis de la política y nuevas formas de participación de la sociedad civil», dins del pla
d'investigació 2.2 de la Universitat Jaume I de Castelló (P1.1B2013-24).
© Del text: els autors i les autores, 2015
© De la present edició: Publicacions de la Universitat Jaume I, 2015
Edita: Publicacions de la Universitat Jaume I. Servei de Comunicació i Publicacions.
Campus del Riu Sec. Edifici Rectorat i Serveis Centrals. 12071 Castelló de la Plana
Fax 964 72 88 32 http://www.tenda.uji.es – e-mail: publicacions@uji.es
ISSN: 1130-6149 – Dipòsit Legal: CS-301-1992
ISSN e: 2254-4135
DOI Número Revista: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17
DOI Revista: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca
http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/recerca
Cap part d’aquesta publicació, incloent-hi el disseny de la coberta, no pot ser reproduïda, emmagatzenada,
ni transmesa de cap manera, ni per cap mitjà (elèctric, químic, mecànic, òptic, de gravació o bé fotocòpia)
sense autorització prèvia de la marca editorial.
ÍnDEx
Introducción
............................................................................................................................................................................
7
ACtIvISm AnD CIvIl SoCIEty: bRoADEnIng
PARtICIPAtIon AnD DEEPEnIng DEmoCRACy
Paul Dekker anD ramón a. Feenstra
Tilburg University and The Netherlands Institute for Social Research /
Universitat Jaume I
Artículos
thE PSyCh-PolItICS of AuStERIty; DEmoCRACy,
SovEREIgnty AnD CIvIC PRotESt ............................................................... 15
FreD Powell
University College Cork, Ireland
EuRoPEAnIzAtIon AnD SoCIAl movEmEnt
mobIlIzAtIon DuRIng thE EuRoPEAn SovEREIgn
DEbt CRISIS: thE CASES of SPAIn AnD gREECE .............. 33
angela Bourne anD sevasti ChatzoPoulou
Roskilde University, Denmark
EmotIonAl PolItICS on fACEbook.
An ExPloRAtoRy StuDy of PoDEmoS’
DISCouRSE DuRIng thE EuRoPEAn ElECtIon
CAmPAIgn 2014 .............................................................................................................................................. 61
agnese samPietro anD liDia valera orDaz
University of Valencia, Spain
El movImEnt PER l’okuPACIó I El movImEnt
PER l’hAbItAtgE: SEmblAnCES, DIfERènCIES
I ConfluènCIES En tEmPS DE CRISI ...................................................... 85
roBert gonzález garCía
Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, México
DEmoCRACy wIll nEvER bE thE SAmE AgAIn:
21St CEntuRy PRotESt AnD thE tRAnSfoRmAtIon
of PolItICS .................................................................................................................................................. 107
simon tormey
The University of Sydney, Australia
Reseñas de libros
La idea de la Justicia. Amartya Sen. Reseñado por Martha
Rodríguez Coronel ...................................................................................................................................... 129
Revolución en punto cero. Trabajo doméstico,
reproducción y luchas feministas. Silvia Federici. Reseñado
por Maria Medina-Vicent ................................................................................................................... 132
La opción reformista: entre el despotismo y la revolución.
Andrés Piqueras Infante. Reseñado por Albert Noguera
Fernández ................................................................................................................................................................. 136
Jóvenes, Internet y Política. Equipo IGOPnet: Joan Subirats,
Mayo Fuster, Rubén Martínez, Marco Berlinguer y Jorge Luis
Salcedo. Reseñado por Luis Vives ......................................................................................... 143
breves currículums de los autores y autoras .................................................................. 149
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 7-13
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.1
Activism and Civil Society: broadening
Participation and Deepening Democracy
PAUL DEKKER and RAMÓN A. FEENSTRA*1
TILBURG UNIVERSITY AND THE NETHERLANDS INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH / UNIVERSITAT JAUME I
In recent years, we have witnessed the emergence of political activism
through an irruption of citizen movements – 5M or Occupy–, the birth of
new political platforms –5 Stelle, Zyrisa, Podemos– and the rise of new
direct action groups, such as Anonymous, Stop-Evictions Movements, cooperatives, to name just a few. In some countries this activism has not just
placed substantial pressure on traditional actors of representative democracy and governments, but has also opened up opportunities for structural
changes in the policymaking context and procedures (García Marzá, 2012).
At the same time, the emergence of new forms of citizen political involvement influences our classical understanding of the political participation
concept. In political science, the term participation is generally, and
sometimes exclusively, associated with representational structures of government (Verba and Nie, 1972). Currently, numerous examples demonstrate that participation is not limited to either choosing through elections
those who form and control the government, or trying to influence their
decisions. Participation transcends the act of voting, becoming a party affiliate or contacting political representatives; that is, it takes multiple, new,
and both conventional and unconventional shapes, in both political and
civil-society circles.
The background of the present rise of political discontent and protest in
Europe is the financial economic crisis since 2008 in general, and the Euro
Crisis in Southern Europe in particular. Three articles in this special issue
focus on Southern Europe. In order to reflect about how different developments have been, we present a few graphs of developments in Spain, Greece
(the two countries dealt with in this issue), and also Portugal, Germany and
Sweden, for a comparative perspective. Figure 1 shows the development of
(net) trust in parliament. It reveals very different developments, from stable
or even somewhat increasing positive trust levels in Sweden and Germany,
*
Ramón Feenstra is a member of research projects: FI2013-47136-C2-2-P, funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, and P1.1B2013-24, funded by the Universitat Jaume I of
Castellón.
Índex
8
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.1 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 7-13
to enormous falls in the South. For instance, Spain goes from +19 points at
the beginning of 2008 (54% tended to trust, 35% tended not to trust parliament) to -74% points at the end of 2014 (10% tended to trust, 80% tended
not to trust).
* Presented is the percentage of people who ‘tended to trust’ minus the percentage who
‘tended not to trust’ (the lower house of) the National Parliament.
Source: Eurobarometer 57.1 – 82.3
figure 1
net trust in national Parliaments,* 2002-2014
Figure 2 shows high, and maybe even rising, levels of satisfaction with the
functioning of national democracy in Sweden and Germany, a lower, but not
deteriorating, level in Portugal, and a clear decrease in Spain and Greece (no
2012/13 data).
Índex
9
PAUL DEKKER / RAMÓN A. FEENSTRA Activism and Civil Society: Broadening Participation
* Average satisfaction with ‘the way democracy works in [country]’ on a scale from 0 (extremely dissatisfied) to 100 (extremely satisfied)
Source: European Social Survey 1-6
figure 2
Satisfaction with Democracy,* 2002-2013
Figure 3 reports participation in demonstrations, with rather stable, but
low levels of not more than 10% of the population pretending to have taken
part in demonstrations in the 12 months before the interview, where Spain
had overall higher levels and over 30% in 2004. That year Spain suffered the
11 March bomb attacks and Aznar’s government’s information manipulation
about those responsible for the attacks. During the same period, there was a
change of government with PSOEs’ electoral victory.
The ‘lawful public demonstrations’ of Figure 3 are only one manifestation
of political protest (as we may generally assume in EU countries.Yet in North
Korea, not joining a demonstration to show support for the Leader might be
quite a courageous form of protest). Countries have different repertoires,
which might change over time (Quaranta, 2012), just as organising social
movements might do, or copying forms of action of movements elsewhere
(della Porta and Mattoni, 2015).
Índex
10
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.1 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 7-13
* % that has taken part in a lawful public demonstration during the last 12 months to try
«to improve things in [country] or help prevent things from going wrong».
Source: European Social Survey 1-6
figure 3
Participation in demonstrations,* 2002-2013
Diverse democratic systems seem to have witnessed the establishment of
two key trends. On the one hand, there is growing disaffection with representation structures caused by generalised disapproval of how institutions
have functioned, although the value of their existence is never denied. On
the other hand, there is growing demand for civic participation among various population strata.
The new ways of action, in turn, renew and transform forms of political
participation of civil society, which finds fresh alternatives, perspectives,
tactics and repertoires surface around the notion of protest, activism and
civil society (van Laer and van Aelst, 2010). This special issue of RECERCA includes a multidisciplinary range of articles that have one thing in common:
the analysis of the meaning and dynamics of this civil society political participation renewal and reconfiguration. Previous issues of RECERCA have focussed on the meaning of civil society (Dekker, 2008; Feenstra, 2008), the
importance of the common goods (Abad and Abad, 2014), or the role of social economy as an economic engine (Herrero-Blasco, 2014; Donati and
Calvo, 2014; Innerarity, 2012; Ordóñez, 2014).This special 2015 issue focuses
Índex
11
PAUL DEKKER / RAMÓN A. FEENSTRA Activism and Civil Society: Broadening Participation
on the field of activism and its role in reshaping the meaning of participation, and includes five articles of authors affiliated to institutions in five
countries: Mexico, Denmark, Ireland, Spain and Australia.
In the first article, «The Psych-politics of Austerity; democracy, sovereignty
and civic protest», Powell argues that new forms of civic protest are giving
voice to people in the age of the Internet. The author poses the question of
whether these new ways of anti-austerity protests form part of: (a) a long
militant, and sometimes violent tradition of street politics based on class
struggle or; (b) a process of deepening democracy into more participatory
forms for peaceful and creative political interaction and democratic decision
making. Powell considers that movements such as Occupy form part of an
anti-austerity counter-fiction that is creating a participative democratic narrative in which citizens are being invited to become actors in making their
own history. The author concludes by asserting that we are experiencing
«the democratisation of democracy in response to the invisibility of autocratic power that seeks to discursively mould contemporary political reality,
and fails».
In the next three articles, we focus on experiences in Southern Europe.
In «Europeanization and social movement mobilization during the European
sovereign debt crisis: The cases of Spain and Greece», Bourne and Chatzopoulou examine the Europeanisation of social movements in the European
Sovereign Debt (ESD) Crisis context. These authors present the findings of a
pilot study which centers on social movement mobilisation in Spain and
Greece between May and June 2011. Using newspapers as a primary source
of data, the authors suggest that the largest category of contentious-action
events in both Spain and Greece was action that focused entirely on the
domestic arena during the studied period.
The third article, «Emotional politics on Facebook. An exploratory study
of Podemos’ discourse during the European election campaign 2014», focuses on the new Spanish party Podemos. Following a pragmatic linguistic
approach, Sampietro and Valera analyse the presence of positive Facebook
messages during the campaign and the contrast of these messages with
other public discourses of this political formation. The authors show a significant presence of emotions in Podemos’ discourse
As the fourth article, González' text «Squatting movement and housing
movement: similarities, differences and convergences in times of crisis» goes
more deeply into another key Spanish political actor: the squatters' movement and the Platform of by Mortgage Victims (PAH, in Spanish). This text
compares these two actors and their different political courses, repertories,
demands and strategies. González goes into the meaning and importance of
Índex
12
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.1 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 7-13
some of the actors who have played a more relevant role in the vibrant
civil society of Spain in recent years.
Fifth and finally, in «Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century protest and the transformation of politics»,Tormey looks at the current
wave of protests and demonstrations against austerity in favour of democracy and asks what they have in common and what is new. He concludes
that «the revolts and rebellions that we see around Europe, and indeed the
world, have in common their rejection of the logic of representative politics
and representation more generally». This author analyses what he states as a
crisis of representative politics, a crisis which is transforming the nature of
mobilisation, contestation and politics more generally. More specifically,
Tormey considers that «Politics is undergoing a Gestalt shift», on which we
need to reflect as political theorists and empirical scientists.
Thus the country case studies and general reflections of this special issue
highlight important aspects and profound layers of today’s movements
against austerity and for democracy in the Western world, particularly in
Southern Europe. We hope that the questions raised may contribute to
agenda-setting for democratic renewal as well as for civil society research,
even if the specific protest phenomena, movements and organisations examined herein might well disappear or evaporate.
REfEREnCES
ABAD, J. & M. ABAD (2014): «La economía social y solidaria como alternativa
económica. Bienes comunes y democracia», Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 15, pp. 55-75.
ALONSO, S. (2014): «Votas pero no eliges: la democracia y la crisis de la deuda
soberana en la eurozona», Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 15,
pp. 21-53.
DEKKER, P. (2008): «La disolución de la sociedad civil: sobre los ideales y las
vaguedades en la esfera de las asociaciones de voluntariado», Recerca.
Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 8, pp. 113-133.
DELLA PORTA, D. and A. MATTONI (eds.) (2015): Spreading protest. Social movements in times of crisis, Colchester, ECPR Press.
DONATI, P. & CALVO, P. (2014): «New Insights into Relational Goods». Recerca.
Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 14, pp. 7-17.
FEENSTRA, R. (2008): «Diferentes concepciones de sociedad civil: la problemática
de un concepto», Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 8, pp. 47-66.
Índex
13
PAUL DEKKER / RAMÓN A. FEENSTRA Activism and Civil Society: Broadening Participation
GARCÍA MARZA, D. (2013): «Democracia de doble vía: el no-lugar de la empresa
en la sociedad civil», Revista del Clad. Reforma y Democracia, 57, 67-92.
INNERARITY, D. (2012): «Otra ciencia económica», Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 12, pp. 53-59
HERRERO-BLASCO, A. (2014): «La Economía Social: su función económica y las
políticas públicas de fomento», Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi,
15, pp. 77-91.
ORDOÑEZ, V. (2014): «Economía, valores y democracia. Diálogo con Christian
Felber», Recerca. Revista de pensament i anàlisi, 15, pp. 153-161.
QUARANTA, M. (2012): «Measuring political protest in Western Europe: assessing cross-national equivalence», European Political Science Review, 5(3),
pp. 457-482.
VAN LAER, J. and VAN AELST, P. (2010): «Internet and social movement action
repertoires: Opportunities and limitations», Information Communication and Society, 13(8), pp. 1146–1171.
VERBA, S. and NIE, N. (1972): Participation in America: Political democracy
and social equality, Nueva York, Harper and Row.
Índex
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 15-31
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2
the Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy,
Sovereignty and Civic Protest
Los psico-política de la austeridad; la democracia,
la soberanía y la protesta cívica
FRED POWELL
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL SCIENCE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE CORK (IRELAND)
Artículo recibido: 1 marzo 2015
Solicitud de revisión: 28 mayo 2015
Artículo aceptado: 2 julio 2015
Abstract
This article argues that new (and sometimes invisible) forms of civic protest are finding
a voice in the age of the Internet. It poses the questions whether these voices of protest
are (a) part of a long, militant and sometimes violent tradition of street politics based on
class struggle or (b) new, peaceful and creative political (and anti-political) platforms (a
metaphysical revolt) offering critical and innovative insights into the possibilities of democratic renewal - as part of a process of deepening democracy into more ethical and participatory forms.
Keywords: austerity, civil society, mini-publics, Occupy movement
Resumen
En este artículo se argumenta que las nuevas (y a veces invisibles) formas de protesta
cívica están encontrando voz en la era de internet. Se plantea la cuestión de si estas voces
de protesta son (a) parte de una larga, militante y, en ocasiones, violenta tradición de
política de la calle basada en la lucha de clases o bien (b) nuevas, pacíficas y creativas
plataformas (una revuelta metafísica) políticas (y antipolítica), que ofrece una perspectiva
innovadora y crítica respecto a las posibilidades de renovación democrática, como parte
de un proceso de profundización de la democracia en formas más éticas y participativas.
Palabras clave: austeridad, sociedad civil, mini-públicos, Movimiento Occupy
Índex
16
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
The metaphysical rebel protests against the human condition in general.
Albert Camus (1962)
Saturday 3 December 2011 saw a hugely successful pre-budget ‘Parade
of Defiance’ against the IMF-imposed cuts throughout the streets of Cork.
This was a creative protest organised by Occupy Cork to show the city’s
opposition to austerity measures and to raise our voices together against
the undemocratic forcing of these cuts on the people of this country. Between 1,000 and 1,200 people marched behind banners with messages
such as ‘Not my Debt’ and ‘This is not a Recession, this is a Robbery’.
Occupy Cork (Issue 3, 2011)
The Little People came suddenly. I don’t know who they are. I don’t know
what it means. I was a prisoner of the story [IQ84]. I had no choice.They
came, and I described it.That is my work.
Haruki Murakami (The New York Review of Books, December 8, 2011)
IntRoDuCtIon
Two recent events captured the essence of our times. First, the Occupy
Movement which began in Wall Street, New York City, on September 17th,
2011, and spread across the world.The message of the Occupy Movement is
a simple one. It opposes the austerity measures imposed on ordinary people
around the world, the 99% who it argues have been expropriated by the
wealthiest 1% of the population. Second, the much anticipated Haruki Murakami novel published in 2011 entitled IQ84, while clearly inspired by
George Orwell’s 1984 allegory about Stalinist tyranny, takes the reader into
a counterworld of unreality, where surveillance is all pervasive and the ‘Little
People’ hide from a weirdly unsettling Lewis Carroll wonderland of horrors
and the horrifying exercise of power over the mesmerized. Both the Occupy
Movement and Murakami’s IQ84 illuminate aspects of the world we currently inhabit: the dominance of unaccountable and largely invisible systems
of power but also the willingness of citizens to globally struggle against
these dark forces.The ‘Little People’ have become the «unsignified signifiers»
probing behind the mirror of power (Baxter, 2011: 25). In doing so they are
rethinking the nature of modernity as an imaginary act. Castoriadis in his
book The Imaginary Institution of Society (1987) redefined modernity as
a struggle between a radical democratic project of autonomy (i.e. personal
freedom to determine one’s own future without structural manipulation)
and the neo-institutional project of mastery of what Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri in their book Empire identify as «a decentered and deterritorializing apparatus of rule that progressively incorporates the entire global
Índex
17
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
realm» under «a single rule» (2000: xii).The adoption of the austerity project
by the European Union, arguably, has initiated a struggle between the disciplinary agenda of what it’s critics caricature as the European ‘super-state’
that is being resisted by the ‘Little People’ through civic protest. But is this
civic protest simply reactive and defensive against change or does it represent a new ethical form of democratic engagement from below? It reminds
us of Albert Camus’ (1962) distinction between rebellion as an act of spontaneous protest as opposed to revolution, which implies the transfer of sovereign power to a new regime. In that sense it is very different in its objectives to the Velvet revolutions of Central and Eastern Europe and the
Maghreb-Mashreq region.
In this article the author seeks to develop Haruki Murakami’s imagery of the
‘Little People’, probing behind the mirror of power in the context of popular
democratic resistance to austerity policies. The author poses two questions. Is
civic protest in the twenty-first century simply the latest manifestation of a long
tradition of confrontational street politics, dating back to the class warfare of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries or does it in the age of the Internet represent a new form of participative democratic politics, that is seeking to ethically
challenge elite power and reframe democratic practice?
1. thE wIlD hyDRA of InvISIblE CIvIl SoCIEty
Steinhoff argues that «invisible civil society is the by-product of the decline
of the late 1960’s-early 1970’s New Left protest movement» (2015:103). She
contends that the stigmatization of the New Left, hierarchical organizations
and unpleasant confrontations with the police led to the building of newly
conceived mini-publics, made up of networks that constitute an invisible civil
society. Steinhoff is commenting from a Japanese perspective, where the mass
demonstration has been significantly replaced by a smaller scale organizational form, known as the shukai (gathering), composed of like-minded citizens (Steinhoff, 2015). Invisible civil society is also a product of the internet.
One of the defining features of the birth of new political platforms in
recent times is the rise of Anonymous which can be dated from 2003 as an
internet platform identified as 4chan «specialising in particularly juvenile
and malevolent prankishness’ in which users hide behind pseudonyms like
weev and dirk digler or, more often, posted as the default user: Anonymous»
(Gleick, 2004: 36). Its prankster politics graduated from trolling to political
activism and, latterly, hacktivism. It is essentially a youth movement (in so far
Índex
18
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
as it can be described as a social movement) virtually engaged with civil
society. Anonymous in its most idealistic form is a forum or platform for the
promotion of discursive ethics. But it has another side: pranking the adult
world. Its form (or formlessness) leads to the «elimination of the person, and
by extension everything associated with it, such as leadership, representation and status» (Coleman 2014, cited in Gleick, 2014: 37). The name (or
brand) itself is entirely democratic. Anybody can claim to be ‘anonymous’. It
is an open participative platform that defies simplistic categorisation as a
movement, organisation, party, etc. It is by its very nature ethereal – part of
the communicative oxygen. It fits into the genre of invisible civil society
activism because it is a communicative space. In this space citizens can
safely participate in a surveillance society by wearing (sometimes literally
the mask of anonymity) as a protective disguise.
The advent of hackstivism has given Anonymous a new platform, as ‘the
wily hydra’ ever changing its disposition. Hacktivism can be highly political
or simply pranksterism. Wikileaks provided a new political direction for
Anonymous to express its oppositional politics, which some of its critics
regard as cyber-terrorism, because it revealed classified security data about
the state. It underlines the connection between Anonymous and cyberspace
–the preferred terrain of its engagement.Anonymous has also used its prankster image to forge a new language that reveals a more nihilistic motivation,
«I do it for the lulz» (Gleick, 2014: 36). It derives from the internet acronym
LOL (laugh out loud)– lulz meaning broadly for the laughs. There is also a
subterranean quality to Anonymous that is both its strength and weakness. It
is nowhere and everywhere.Anonymous is spontaneous and archaic but also
directionless and contentless. Some view pranking as anti-social behaviour
in which a ‘hacker army’ of young people terrorise innocent third parties in
a ‘wave of cybercrime’, evocative of crime and violence on the street. Others
view pranking (like graffiti) as an anomic critique of democracy from an alienated youth culture but do not regard it as a serious movement for its reform, renewal or reconstitution (Gleick, 2014). More visible terrestrial social
movements have sought to fill this space.
The Occupy movement, Los Indignados (Spain) and Aganaktismenoi
(Greece) have emerged in this carnival atmosphere of political protest as the
voice of democracy in the form of a radical civil society. It is a discombobulating mix of the theatrical and theoretical that has been called the ‘multitude’ (Hardt and Negri, 2004). In a global village, the local camps of the Occupy movement stand out as symbols of protest in a world of financialised
capitalism. It also represents what Hardt and Negri term «the mobilization of
Índex
19
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
the common» in which «the common antagonism and common wealth of
the exploited and expropriated are translated into common conduct, habits
and perfomativity» (2004: 211-212). The internet provides the information
that the official media suppresses. A painteresque truth is emerging in the
sense that our world is composed of «many truths that challenge each other,
recoil from each other, reflect from each other, tease each other» (Pinter,
2005). It is difficult separate truth from fiction in this virtual reality.
The Occupy movement, indignados and Aganaktismenoi have sought
to contest official versions of the truth in the interests of public debate
aimed at the creation of an ethical civil society, as a basis for ‘democratizing
democracy’. The Occupy Wall Street Movement was inspired by the Arab
Spring (Van Gelder, 2011; Greenberg, 2011). However, while the occupiers
of Tahrir Square had a single and unifying demand of regime change, the
Occupy movement sought to create a more metaphysical revolt, by addressing the mind.They viewed their street protest as an antidote to the pollution
of our minds by «infotoxins […] commercial messaging and the […] financial and ethical catastrophes that loom before humanity» (Greenberg, 2011).
The link to Camus’ existential humanism is direct. What the Occupy Wall
Street movement and the protesters of Tahrir Square shared was a common
mastering of technology through on-line networking sites that enabled them
to manage their protests in a unique new way.
The Occupy movement became a global phenomenon.While the Occupy
Wall Street movement has been the centre of attention, it was preceded by
‘indignant’ camps in Madrid, Athens, Santiago and Malaysia. The Occupy
movements’ unifying theme is economic and social injustice – encapsulated
in the slogan 99% are being expropriated by the 1%. This is a powerful message that has attracted popular support, «polls have shown almost twice as
many Americans agreeded with Occupy Wall Street than disagree with it. Far
from alienating middle America, the movement captured the public and political imagination» (Young, 2012: 3). The success of political platforms associated with Indignados in local and regional elections in Spain during 2015
also suggests on-going significant popular support (Guardian, 6 June 2015).
This electoral success is no doubt at least in part directly linked to the suppression of the movement through the closure of street camps’ politically
constructing that the law as harsher on protesters than bankers, who the
anti-austerity campaigners hold responsible for the Global crisis.
Índex
20
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
2. thE PolItICS of EuRoPEAn PublIC outRAgE
Stéphane Hessel’s Time of Outrage (2011) calling on young people to
resist alleged state oppression in a similar manner to World War II resistance movements found its answer on the streets across European cities
during 2011. Greece and Spain became the main theatres of protest. In
Spain Democracia real ya! was the slogan of Spanish indignados that occupied the Plaza del Sol in Madrid and Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona and
hundreds of squares across the country from the 15th May 2011, calling for
changes in the social and economic policies and greater participation by
citizens in decision-making (della Porta, 2012). In Greece the Aganaktismenoi movement occupied Syntagma square in Athens on the 29th June 2011
and engaged in public debate about the consequences of the harsh austerity measures being imposed on the country. The parallels with the classical
Athenian agora, which met a few hundred metres away, were striking
(Guardian, 15 June 2011).The daily occupations of Syntagma square often
drew crowds of 100,000 citizens to protest. In many other European cities
similar protests took place organised by outraged citizens. Their sense of
injustice was very real.
At the core of the perceived injustice is the belief that hundreds of millions of euros have been expended on saving commercial banks, while millions of citizens are reduced to poverty. Donatella della Porta has observed
that this has led to a public perception of profound social injustice – encapsulated in the metaphor «the abduction of democracy» (2012: 66). The austerity solution to the economic crisis, according to this analysis, is generating
a political crisis that is undermining trust in democratic institutions. Della
Porta argues that the crisis is delegitimising the elitist model of democracy
(based on political parties) because the locus of decision-making has moved
elsewhere (Brussels, Berlin, New York) and is no longer responsive to popular concerns.The influence of lobby groups and shadowy powerful interests
over politicians has led to perceptions of corruption at the heart of government. Political party funding systems have heightened this distrust because
of the influence of ‘oligarchs’. The concentration of media ownership in the
hands of wealthy media moguls has further exacerbated public anxiety. Silvio Berlusconi in Italy perhaps best personifies this link between media and
politics.
The response to austerity economics has been twofold. The traditional
Left has mobilised around strikes, street protests and orchestrated responses
to the public expenditure cuts and erosion of labour rights. New social
Índex
21
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
movements have broadened the struggle into a debate about the nature and
meaning of democracy – Democracia Real Ya! Their approach seeks not
only policy change but greater public participation in the formulation of
policy, which digitalisation makes possible.They have put Claus Offe’s metaquestion of democracy at the centre of the debate by challenging the
boundaries of institutional politics (della Porta, 2012). Della Porta observes:
[…] the indignados discourse on democracy is articulated and complex, taking up some
of the principal criticisms of the ever-decreasing quality of representative democracies,
but also some of the main proposals inspired by other democratic qualities beyond electoral representation. These proposals resonate with (more traditional) participatory visions, but also with new deliberative conceptions that underline the importance of creating multiple public spaces, egalitarian but plural (2012: 66).
The issue is the quality of individual citizen’s personal democratic experiences and the need for political elites to actively engage with citizens
voices. The outraged movement is reportedly supported by 90% of citizens
in Spain and Greece (Della Porta, 2012: 67). Trust in European institutions
arguably will not be fully restored until democratic engagement takes place
around the question what it means to be a citizen in the twenty-first century.
This is the biggest challenge facing European civil society in contemporary
reality, since it is existentially founded on the right to associate as the cornerstone of democratic practice (Powell, 2013). That is the meta-question of
democracy.
3. thE mEtA- QuEStIon of DEmoCRACy
Democracy is about humanity’s desire to nurture a public sphere for the
common good. But there political contestation begins. Truth is shaped by
ideology (Pinter, 2005). Because we live in an era when wealth is once again
in the ascendant, we should not be blinded by its truths. Thomas Piketty in
his best-selling book Capital in the twenty-first Century (2014), based on
data from twenty countries and with a historic analysis reaching back to the
eighteenth century, has sought to establish long-term economic and social
patterns. He adopts a simple and, in social justice terms, pessimistic formula
to explain economic inequality: r>g (meaning that return on capital is generally higher than economic growth). The import of Piketty’s analysis is that
while the apocalyptic predictions of Karl Marx of the gradual immiseration
of the population may have been avoided by economic growth and the diffusion of knowledge, inequality is growing. The logic behind Piketty’s arguÍndex
22
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
ment suggests that the optimism that accompanied the welfare state, as a
social compromise between capital and labour, was not founded on a solid
long term redistributive base. The pessimism of Piketty’s analysis raises existential questions for democracy in general and social democracy in particular. If it is impossible to create greater equality, what is the point in democracy? Is the elite model of representative democracy undemocratic? Is there
a crisis of trust at the core of institutional politics, which is corrupting our
political institutions from the inside? What is the truth behind Offe’s (1985)
meta-question of democracy in terms of citizen’s capacities to change the
boundaries of institutional politics? Is political agency simply a Quixotic
fantasy that should be disregarded as hopelessly idealistic at best and anomic
pranking of the system at worst? Or does democratic protest speak truth to
power by articulating the two-sided nature of sovereignty, which involves
constant struggle (Hardt and Negri, 2004).
John Keane in his important book The Life and Death of Democracy
locates its origins in Ancient Athens (2009). The agora (a site of political assembly or marketplace) became a metaphor for Greek civil society as Greece
evolved into city states from about 700 BC. Keane concludes «through their
public encounters in the agora, Athenians could feel their power, their ability to speak to each other, to act with and against their fellow citizens, in
pursuit of commonly defined ends» (2009:14). The agora enabled minipublics to participate in the democratic process. This made it immediate,
accountable and transparent. Steinhoff in a comment on the benefits of political participation through the agency of protest in contemporary society
argues: (1) participation fulfils deep psychological needs for competence,
autonomy and relatedness, and (2) social movement research indicates that
participation «generates collective identity, solidarity, and commitment,
which in turn produces social and emotional well-being» (2015: 101-104).
Civic protest also goes to the core of the democratic project, as a two-sided
dialogue between the people and power that is in essence an on-going political drama about sovereignty.
Drama, like democracy, is a product of Ancient Greece in terms of our
contemporary understanding of it as an art form involving a performance
and audience. There are two dramatic forms: tragedy and comedy. The three
great Greek tragedians were: Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, who successively moved the focus of their art from the divine to the human. Greek
comedy is divisible into ‘old comedy’ and ‘new comedy’. Aristophanes (c444385BCE) was the master of old comedy who wrote forty-four plays, eleven
of which survive. His satirical drama combines risqué wit and humour with
Índex
23
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
intense invective against his enemies in a search for truth. While a conservative by disposition,Aristophanes used the dramatic form to expose abuses of
power and privilege. On the other hand, the ‘new comedy’ more closely resembles comedy as human paradox and farce that we associate with much
of modern apolitical comedy. But political comedy is still very much alive.
The most current example of political drama is the victory of the radicalminded Syriza party in the 2015 Greek General Elections. It was an epic
political event dubbed ‘the Red Spring’. The Syriza leader, Alexis Tsipras (as
Greek Prime Minister) compared his political movement’s victory to the inexorable forward force of an ancient Greek drama (Guardian Editorial 31
January 2015). Invoking Aristotle’s analysis he argued that the tragedy of
austerity (the hubris of neo-liberalism) would be followed by nemesis (EU
political failure) and ultimately catharsis in the form of democratic renewal.
Alexis Tsipras proclaimed: «Because Greece is the county of Sophocles, who
taught us with his Antigone that there are moments in which the supreme
law is justice» (Guardian 31 January 2015). He was referring to Antigone’s
defiance of the king (her uncle) that her dead brother should be denied the
civility of a burial. Her actions are justified on the basis that power can be
trumped by the higher law of justice. In Sophocles’ Greek tragedy Antigone
speaks truth to power by her brave defiance of the king.
The parallels between Antigone’s struggle for justice and Syriza’s challenge to the EU austerity policies is unmistakable. Alexis Tsipras has attracted
the world’s attention by speaking truth to power in the cause of social justice. Of course, there is wide speculation that Syriza’s defiance will end as
another Greek tragedy. Yet this contemporary political drama reminds us
that there are deep roots in European civilisation that lead back to Athenian
democracy. Civility emerged in classical culture as the basis of community,
social stability and mutual dependence. Citizens internalised social and cultural codes of behaviour that enabled them to communicate non-violently
with neighbours and strangers – agreeing to disagree – in conflict-free communicative zones (Anheier, 2010). Civility is the cornerstone of civil society
because of its association with the civilising process (Elias, 1994). Anheier
concludes that «civility creates predictability and builds social capital
through successful encounters» (2010: 477). In summary, civility provides
the communicative competencies and spaces upon which civil society is
constructed. Aristotle (384-322BCE) in both his Politics and Nicomachean
Ethics identifies political community as supreme (Molnar, 2010). Greek democracy became the defining event in European political formation. Its
rootedness is the fundamental human right to association, which has, argu-
Índex
24
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
ably, been lost in the era of representative democracy dominated by elites.
However, a vibrant set of social movements is challenging European political
elites in new dramatic forms.
4. AuStERIty, PolItICAl fICtIon AnD DEmoCRAtIC REnEwAl
Ireland as another ‘Bailout’ state that is also at the epicentre of the European austerity programme. While the country successfully ended the terrorist war in Northern Ireland through the 1998 Belfast Agreement, economic
hybris had created a new crisis of unparalleled proportions. During the
Celtic Tiger imaginary, arguably the Irish became self-absorbed subjects
(consumer citizens) rather than active citizens engaged in society. It was a
perfect fantasy land – beyond the reach of reality, in which Ireland borrowed
from the future in a wager that it lost. Prosperity transformed Ireland from
an under-development to Asian Tiger style economy (Powell, 1992; Powell
and Geoghegan, 2004; Powell, 2012).
Unlike Greece, Ireland has responded to its ‘Bailout’ with the fatalistic
resignation of a sinner and accepted its creditors imposition of ‘responsibilisation’ for the country’s debt, rather than allocating responsibility to the
European commercial banking sector that has arguably caused the crisis in
peripheral nations through profligate lending. Apart from the Occupy Movement there was initially very limited opposition to the draconian policies of
the ‘Bailout’ imposed on domestic social expenditure, leading to: cuts in public sector pay; increases in teacher: pupil ratios in schools; lengthening hospital waiting lists and rising health insurance costs, rising unemployment
(over 14% of the workforce) and retrenchment in social welfare payments.
A general election in 2011 resulted in the Fianna Fail/Green Coalition being ejected from power. Fianna Fail (a populist centre-right party) was reduced to a parliamentary rump. The Greens were wiped out losing all of
their seats in the Dail (parliament). But they were replaced by Fine Gael-led
government supported by a minority centre-left Labour Party. Fine Gael like
Fianna Fail is also a centre-right party. Both share a common history in the
nationalist Sinn Fein (Ourselves) movement, having split following the partition of Ireland in the early 1920s. The Fine Gael-Labour government promised a ‘democratic revolution’ based upon political reform. Labour had been
elected on a Syriza-style promise of ‘Labour’s way, not Frankfurt’s way’. However, any reneging on bondholders was quickly ruled out. The new govern-
Índex
25
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
ment accepted the terms of the ‘Bailout’ without equivocation from the start
of their tenure in office.
This strategy has been supported by the political fiction that the ‘Bailout’
has been a success. Ireland can afford to repay its debts. In 2014 Ireland paid
7.5 billion to service debts of 214 billion compared with Greece, which paid
8 billion to service debts of 315 billion (O’Toole, 2015). The political fiction
is underpinned by the myth that Ireland is a rich Northern European country that is prudently paying the costs of the failure of its private banks. In
reality, the previous government (allegedly under pressure from the European Central Bank) transferred private bank debts to the citizens in a decision that raises fundamental questions regarding democratic process. The
result of this decision transferred Ireland’s sovereignty in terms of taxation
and fiscal policy to the Troika (EU, ECB, IMF).
The consequences have been draconian as the Irish government seeks to
combine major cuts in public expenditure with rises in taxation. The introduction of a property charge led to significant protest. But it was the introduction of a water charge (tax) during 2014 that finally galvanised public
opinion against austerity policies. Several hundreds of thousands of citizens
took to the streets in a series of protests that have continued into 2015.
Streets protests were accompanied by a sharp decline in support for mainstream political parties and a growth in support for left-wing populist parties
and independents. Many citizens are experiencing a profound disenchantment with politics and political institutions. The water charge has been significantly scaled back with bills arriving on a quarterly basis to minimise
their impact. Many citizens have refused to register for the water charge as
a protest against austerity. More significantly, there has been a significant erosion in the electoral dominance of the main stream political parties, with
one-third of the electorate opting for independent candidates in recent opinion polls.
In post Celtic Tiger Ireland, the citizens are experiencing what Slavoj
Žižek calls ‘The real real’ (2011), which he likens to the horror in a horror
film. The line between politics and fantasy has become blurred in Ireland’s
contemporary reality. This presents citizens with a series of questions:
• How can they overcome being subjects?
• How do they restore content to the democratic imaginary?
• How do they deal with the legacy of the 2008 crash?
Índex
26
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
The Irish President, poet and intellectual Michael D. Higgins, advocates as
an alternative to the deeply compromised status quo a creative society constructed from the bottom-up:
[…] the creative society cannot be imposed from above; it is built on creativity made possible by sustainable communities. Properly respected, the cultural space can be an invitation to push the boundaries of the possible – enfranchising us all in our capacity for living,
and enriching the social and economic life of the nation (Higgins, 2011: 22).
The President argues that the alternative is Žižek’s (2011) apocalyptic
vision, outlined in his book Living in the End Time:
Should the adjustment in economic and social assumptions prove to be incapable of being
made, we probably face an unmediated confrontation between the excluded and those
who chose to be unconcerned. Such a point is the one at which the dark prescriptions of
Slavoj Žižek become relevant.Around the world there is evidence that such an outcome is
achieving momentum, and some support (Higgins, 2011: 62).
The challenge that President Higgins has presented is essentially about
the need for a new political project in post-Bailout Ireland to take the narrative of democracy forward. It is very clearly framed within the language of
civil society: community, inclusive citizenship and sustainability.
Arguably, President Higgins’ vision of a political rupture generated by
bottom-up forces within civil society points to the social left, as opposed to
the political left, as the drivers of change in post-politics society. The Occupy
movement (which experienced suppression in New York, London and Dublin) is the most visible contemporary manifestation of the social left as an
actor in redefining politics. In response to the eviction of protestors from
the grounds of St Paul’s Cathedral the Guardian (29 February 2012) declared on its front page:
You cannot evict an idea. Such is the message of defiance from Occupy. But it is not entirely true. For the whole point of Occupy is that it’s not just an idea bouncing around the
internet. Occupy is stubbornly about the physical reality of space. Others may write books
and organise seminars. Occupy puts up tents. It takes up space. It is there.
Sarah van Gelder likens the Occupy Movement to the Arab Spring and
argues that its name identifies the cause of the current crisis: «Wall street
banks, big corporations, and others among the 1% are claiming the world’s
wealth for themselves at the expense of the 99% and having their way with
governments» (2011: 1). What is refreshing about the Occupy Movements is
their determination to link their political critique of capitalism to practical
Índex
27
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
welfare initiatives aimed at the socially excluded. Despite their chaos they
genuinely represent a search for truth through civic protest and metaphysical rebellion.
President Higgin’s concept of a ‘creative society’ has been taken up by the
Cork Occupy Movement as a philosophical basis of their protest:
A hugely important aspect of the protest was the involvement of Cork Community Art
Link, who brought a real creative and artistic colour to the demonstration. This combines
the importance of our presence on the South Mall in the heart of the city with an appreciation of the need to move in more creative directions, opening up the Occupy movement
to all. This is about making the movement accessible and welcoming to all, and bringing
that together with the principles of equality and democracy that are central to what we
do. In a time where there is such an overwhelming amount and range of advertising constantly being forced down our throats, we need to work in ways that really engage with
people, and the wide and open nature of the Occupy movement is bringing something
really new to the table.
Creative protests such as the Parade are testament to a DIY ethic producing our own culture, one that can be defiant through creativity, but this shouldn’t be seen as the be-all and
end-all of how we’re to organise ourselves for this fight. We should not feel bound to the
past to feel we owe today’s struggle to those who’ve come before us – we should try to
see ourselves within the tradition of human beings standing up for potent ideas of justice,
equality and dignity. How we interpret that challenge of building a new society should
be across the whole spectrum of human capacity – the creative and cultural shouldn’t
be seen as opposed to the political, to the practical task of organising and mobilising in
cooperation with one another, against those whose interests are currently served by our
rights being stamped on (Occupy Cork, Issue 3, 2011: 11).
The Occupy Movement is part of an anti-austerity counter-fiction that is
creating a participative democratic narrative in which citizens are being invited to become actors in making their own history. It suggests that we are
experiencing ‘the democratisation of democracy’ in response to the invisibility of autocratic power that seeks to discursively mould contemporary political reality and fails. It fails because democracy is foundationally constructed on dialogue between citizens within the POLIS.
5. StRong DEmoCRACy: bEyonD PolItICAl zoology
Benjamin Barber laments the erosion of democracy from within, through
the triumph of thin (representative) democracy – which in his view marginalises citizens from the decision-making process and undermines popular
sovereignty. He likens this process to ‘politics as zookeeping’, in which «de-
Índex
28
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
mocracy is undone by a hundred kinds of activity more profitable than citizenship; by a thousand seductive acquisitions cheaper than liberty» (Barber,
1984: xvii). Thin democracy shifts popular power to distant elite representative institutions, far from communities where citizens live. Instead of participation in decision making, citizens are reduced to a passive state like
animals in a zoo waiting for their keepers to decide their lives for them.
Strong democracy envisages the participation of all the citizenry in at least
some aspects of governance at least some of the time. It is an act of «democraticing democracy» (Santos, 2006). Civil society opens up the public realm
to the possibility of participative democracy because it embraces the mobilization of the sovereignty of ‘the commonwealth’ in the form of people
power (Hardt and Negri, 2009).
Strong democracy offers society the choice of taking responsibility for
the democratic restoration that has the potential to give substance to the
somewhat hackneyed slogan ‘power to the people’. Prugh, Constanza, and
Daly have asserted that strong democracy offers immediate advantages over
the ‘thin democracy’ of the representative variety, emphasising (i) the sociality of the conception of a social ‘us’ inherent in notions of community; (ii)
the dispersal and redistribution of power away from special interests; and
(iii) engaging citizens in the challenges and problems of governance (Prugh
et al., 2000). They add: «we need politics of engagement, not a politics of
consignment» (Prugh et al., 2000: 220).
We live in a world where many active citizens are concerned to address
the democratic deficits that have arisen in the period of globalisation. Participation has become a pivotal concern. Young (2000: 9-10) asserts that
«beyond membership and voting rights, inclusive democracy enables participation and voice for all those affected by problems and their proposed
solutions». In essence, this is a statement of strong democracy. It promotes
participation and inclusion. In contrast, thin democracy leaves it to political
elites to speak for us and represent our interests. There is a fundamental issue of political equality and republican respect in question here. Moreover,
there is an issue of trust and toleration that defines pluralistic democracy.
The reality is that not everybody is given equal voice in liberal democratic
societies. Monarchy survives in its exalted role a wholly undemocratic institution based on the most extreme form of exclusion – blood lineage. But
perhaps more troubling is the role of the oligarchies of power and wealth in
manufacturing consensus, through their capacity to monopolise the media
and purchase political influence. In this hierarchal world of power, exclusion
is rife. As Young puts it, «perhaps the most pervasive and insidious form of
Índex
29
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
external exclusion in modern democracies is what I referred to as the ability
for economically or socially powerful actors also to exercise political domination» (2000: 54). She asserts that «one task of democratic civil society is to
explore and criticise exclusions such as these, and doing so sometimes effectively challenge the legitimacy of institutional rules and their decision»
(Young, 2000: 55). The above critique of the limits of democratic inclusion
begs the question, ‘Is there any point in participation?’ Some commentators
suggest that there may not be any value in participation and add that it is
unreasonable to push people in that direction (Cooke and Kothari, 2001).
They view the postmodern political landscape as barren and civil society as
a meaningless concept. On the other hand, Ramirez contends that in the task
of confronting global hegemonic forces and forging a new grammar of democracy to meet the challenges of the twenty-first century, local and popular movements are opening up new democratic spaces for participation that
are effectively counteracting the more extreme forms of exclusion and erosion of citizen’s political, social and economic rights (2006).
ConCluSIonS
‘Austerity’ now has a ring of a funeral dirge for democracy. The undertakers have come in the form of the Troika (EU, ECB, IMF). The grief reaction
among the citizens for their lost sovereignty has varied from denial through,
anger (Greece) to despairing acceptance (Ireland). There is a rupture with
the welfare state but with no clear vision of the future that isn’t profoundly
anti-democratic. In the circumstances, Benjamin Barber (1984) has advocated to citizens that they have the power to construct their own future by
replacing thin democracy by strong democracy. His democratic vision is for
a bottom-up renewal of popular sovereignty. He wants citizens to forge their
own democratic narrative, in which they once again become sovereign in
making our own history. We are invited by Barber to deepen our democracy,
think for ourselves, and shape our own destiny. Oddly, this sounds strangely
counter-intuitive. Like Benjamin Barber’s caged animals, we don’t like to
leave the comfort of the cage. Somehow, we remain mesmerised like the
characters in Haruki Murakami’s novel, IQ84. But there are voices of protest:
the Akanaktismenoi, Los Indignados and the Occupy Movement. The Occupy Movement has attracted public support because its members dared to
step outside their personal cages and enter the public sphere. Syriza has
been elected to power in Greece. Podemos challenges for power in Spain.
Índex
30
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.2 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 15-31
They have been making democratic noises, which their critics within the
European elite judge to be an unreasonable provocation of the citizens. Despite their public support, their protest is being challenged by European
Union.The anti-austerity movement resembles those campaigns for the right
of association that gave birth to democracy during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. That resulted in the twentieth-century welfare state, the
purportedly good society that benefited citizens, even if it failed to stem
long-term inequality. It too is being suppressed in the era of austerity economics, however successful and compatible with a burgeoning economy
and socially affordable. Social justice is a forbidden language in the twentyfirst century. The Troika undertakers – those global civil servants – point
toward the cages, where the living dead are to be consigned. But the citizens
have started to climb out and seek freedom through greater social justice.
REfEREnCES
BARBER, B. (1984): Strong Democracy: Participatory Politics for a New Age,
Berkeley, University of California Press.
BAXTER, C. (2011): «Behind Murakami’s Mirror», New York Review of Books,
December 8, pp. 23 -25.
CAMUS, A. (1962): The Rebel, Harmondsworth, Penguin.
CASTORIADIS, C. (1987): The Imaginary Institution of Society, Cambridge, MIT
Press.
COOKE, B. and KOTHARI, U. (eds.) (2001): Participation: the New Tyranny? London, Zed Books.
DELLA PORTA, D. (2012): «The Road to Europe: Movements and Democracy», in
KALDOR, M., MOORE, H., and SELCHON, S. (eds.) Global Civil Society 2012,
London, Palgrave Macmillian, pp. 65-67.
GLEICK, J. (2014); «Today’s Dead End Kids», New York Review, December 18th,
Available at: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/dec/18/
anonymous-todays-dead-end-kids/
GREENBERG, M. (2011): «In Zucotte Park», New York Review, November 10th,
Available at: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2011/nov/10/
zuccotti-park/
HARDT, M AND NEGRI, A. (2000) Empire, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
HARDT, M AND NEGRI,A. (2004): Multitude, London, Hamish Hamilton.
HARDT, M AND NEGRI, A. (2009): Commonwealth, Cambridge, Belnap Press.
HESSEL, S. (2011): Time of Outrage. New York, Twelve.
Índex
31
FRED POWELL The Psych-politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and Civic Protest
HIGGINS, M. (2011): Renewing the Republic, Dublin: Liberties Press.
KEANE, J. (2009): The Life and Death of Democracy, London: Simon and
Schuster.
MOLNAR, G. (2010): Civil Society History I: Antiquity, in Anheier, H., Toepler, S.
and List, R. (eds.) in International Encyclopaedia of Civil Society, Volume 1, New York: Springer, pp. 341 - 345.
MURAKAMi, H. (2011): IQ84, London, Harvill Secker.
OFFE, C. (1985): New social Movements: Challenging the Boundaries of Institutional Politics, Social Research, 5(4), pp. 817-868.
ORWELL, G. (1949): 1984, London, Penguin.
O’TOOLE, F. (2015): «State Puts on Rich Mouth When Dealing with Debt», Irish
Times Feb 3rd. Available at: http://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/fintan-otoole-when-it-comes-to-irish-debt-the-state-puts-on-the-rich-mouth-1
.2088572
PIKETTY, T. (2014): Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Boston, Belknap
Press.
PINTER, H. (2005): Art, Truth and Politics. Nobel Lecture.
POWELL, F (1992): The Politics of Irish Social Policy 1600-1992, New York,
Edwin Mellon Press.
POWELL, F. AND GEOGHEGAN, M. (2004): The Politics of Community development,
Dublin, AA Farmar.
POWELL, F. (2012): «Citizens or Subjects? Civil Society and the Republic», in O’
TOOLE, F. (ed.), Up The Republic, London, Faber and Faber.
POWELL, F (2013): The Politics of Civil Society, Bristol, Policy Press.
PRUGH, T. CONSTANZA, R. AND DALY, H. (2000): The Local Politics of Global Sustainability, Washington, DC: Island Press.
RAMIREZ, M. (2006): «The Politics of Recognition and Citizenship», in SANTOS, B.
(ed.) Democratizing Democracy, London, Verso.
SANTOS, B.(ed.) (2006): Democratizing Democracy, London, Verso.
STEINHOFF, P. (2015): «Finding Happiness in Japan’s Invisible Society» Voluntas
26, pp. 98-120.
VAN GELDER, S. (ed) (2011): This Changes Everything, San Francisco, BarretKoehler.
YOUNG, I. M. (2000): Inclusion and Democracy, Oxford, Oxford University
Press.
YOUNG, G. (2012): «The Itinerant UC Left has found its Home in Occupy», The
Guardian, February 27, 2012. Available at: http://www.theguardian.com/
commentisfree/2012/feb/26/us-left-home-occupy-middle-america
ŽIŽEK, S. (2011): Living in the End of Times, London, Verso.
Índex
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 33-60
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3
Europeanization and Social movement mobilization
during the European Sovereign Debt Crisis:
the Cases of Spain and greece
Europeización y movilización de los movimientos sociales
durante la crisis de la deuda soberana europea: los casos
de España y Grecia
ANGELA BOURNE and SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU
ROSKILDE UNIVERSITY (DENMARK)
Artículo recibido: 18 septiembre 2014
Solicitud de revisión: 15 marzo 2015
Artículo aceptado: 7 julio 2015
Abstract
The article addresses Europeanization of social movements in the context of the European Sovereign Debt Crisis. Europeanization occurs when movements collaborate, or make
horizontal communicative linkages with movements in other countries, contest authorities
beyond the state, frame issues as European and claim a European identity. The article presents a theoretical framework and research design for measuring the degree of social movement Europeanization followed by results of a pilot study on mobilization in Spain and
Greece during 2011. While many contentious action events studied only encompassed the
domestic arena, the pilot study showed a relatively high degree of Europeanization in the
Greek case, suggesting the viability of future research.
Keywords: Europeanization, European Union, Financial Crisis, Social Movements
Resumen
El presente artículo aborda la europeización de los movimientos sociales en el contexto de
la crisis de la deuda soberana europea. La europeización se produce cuando los movimientos
colaboran, o establecen vínculos horizontales, con movimientos de otros países, contestan a las
autoridades más allá de los límites del Estado-nación, identifican cuestiones como europeos y
reclaman una identidad europea. El artículo presenta un marco teórico y un diseño investigación para medir el grado de europeización de los movimientos sociales seguido por los resultados de un estudio piloto de la movilización en España y Grecia durante el año 2011.
Mientras que muchas de las acciones de protesta estudiadas solamente apelaban al ámbito
doméstico, el estudio piloto muestra un relativamente alto grado de europeización en el caso
griego, lo que sugiere la viabilidad de futuras investigaciones.
Palabras clave: europeización, Unión Europea, crisis financiera, movimientos sociales
Índex
34
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
IntRoDuCtIon
In this article we examine the Europeanization of social movements in
the context of the European Sovereign Debt (ESD) Crisis. We argue that Europeanization of social movements occurs when movements collaborate, or
make horizontal communicative linkages with movements in other countries, contest authorities beyond the state, frame issues as European and
claim an European identity. An interest in the possible Europeanization of
social movements emerged in the mid-1990s as scholars observed EU-oriented grass roots mobilization by established movements such as the environmental movement and more spontaneous grass roots mobilizations on issues
ranging from EU fishing rules, agricultural subsidies, unemployment in the EU
and plant closures in transnational companies (Tarrow, 1995; Imig and Tarrow, 2000; Rucht, 2002; Marks and McAdam, 1996). It also grew out of work
by social movement scholars on the transnationalization of protest in the
context of globalization (Tarrow, 1995; Della Porta and Tarrow, 2005; Reising,
1999; Smith, 2002 and 2007). Moreover, since the start of the international
financial crisis in 2008, a large, interdisciplinary literature has addressed the
global wave of contention incorporating the Arab Spring, Occupy movements but also many European anti-austerity movements (among others)
(eg. Castells, 2012; Flesher and Cox, 2013; Tejerina, 2013; Worth, 2013; della
Porta and Mattoni, 2014; Flesher, 2014).
A common theme of these literatures is that the degree of social movement Europeanization tends to be rather low. In their protest event analysis
surveying social movement actions in 12 EU member states between 1984
and 1998, for instance, Imig and Tarrow showed «most people, for most issues, continue to protest against national or subnational targets about domestic issues» (2000: 84). Only about 5% of protest events during that time
were categorized as European protests (Imig and Tarrow 2000). Koopmans,
Erbe and Meyer draw similar conclusions, albeit employing different methods – cross-national, semi-structured interviews with social movement organizations (and other domestic and supranational actors) from seven countries (2010). They argue that the strategic repertoire of national political
actors, including both ‘inside’ strategies addressing public administrations,
parliamentarians and the courts, and ‘public-related strategies’ focusing on
the media, public information campaigns and protest, are still primarily focused on the national level (Koopmans, Erbe and Meyer, 2010: 234). Della
Porta and Caiani’s study, compiled from the same data set as that used by
Koopmans, Erbe, and Meyer (2010), also supports the conclusion of ‘low
Índex
35
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
Europeanization’ of the domestic public sphere (Della Porta and Caiani,
2009). Similarly, various scholars examining the global wave of protest following the international financial crisis, have argued that unlike the earlier,
paradigmatic case of transnational collective action, the global justice movement, the current global wave of contention mostly intends, as Flesher put
it, «to reclaim the nation state as a locus and focus of action» (2014: 183, see
also Kaldor and Selchow, 2013; della Porta and Mattoni, 2014). We contend,
however, that there are good reasons for re-examining the case that social
movement Europeanization is insignificant.
In the first place, data pointing to low social movement Europeanization
is now fairly old. Imig and Tarrow’s research examined data from 1984 to
1988 while Koopmans et al and Della Porta and Caiani use data from 1990,
1995 and 2002-3 (Koopmans and Statham, 2010). Furthermore, even though
a large portion of the literature on the recent global wave of mobilization
examines European anti-austerity movements, it tends to neglect processes
of Europeanization. Rather, studies that look beyond the domestic arena tend
to focus on transnational dimensions of collective action, with a predominant interest in transnational diffusion, addressing the spread of mobilization
frames (e.g. calls for ‘real democracy’), tactical repertoires (e.g. occupation
of public spaces), slogans (e.g.‘We are the 99%’) and movement labels (e.g.
Indignados and Occupy) (della Porta and Mattoni, 2014; Flesher, 2014; Kousis, 2014; Tejerina et al., 2013). And yet, a specific focus on the Europeanization of social movements is necessary to understand Europe as a movement
space on its own terms (Flesher and Cox, 2013; Stratham and Trenz, 2013),
while a focus on a broader range of Europeanization dimensions than diffusion will provide a better way of gauging the significance of ‘Europe’ in social movement mobilization.
Moreover, in the context of the ESD crisis, it is reasonable to expect, a
priori, a more significant degree of social movement Europeanization. In the
first place, the accumulation of decision-making authority at the EU level is
perhaps the most cited rationale for a reorientation of social movement activity to that level (see for example, Tarrow, 1995; Imig and Tarrow, 2000;
Rucht, 2002: Della Porta and Caiani, 2009, Statham and Koopmans, 2010), and
the EU has, through the course of ESD crisis, become one of the key crisis actors. Initially, member states, in cooperation with the Commission and the
ECB, set up two temporary funds: the European Financial Stabilization Mechanism (EFSM) and the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) (May 2010June 2013), with a total lending capacity of 500 billion euros. In autumn
2012, the EFSF was replaced by the permanent European Stabilization Mecha-
Índex
36
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
nism (ESM), solidifying the EU mechanisms of economic crisis management.
Member states also changed the ‘no bail-out’ clause in the Treaty of the European Union, paving the way for the first EU and IMF bail-out for Greece in
2010, which was followed by bailouts for Ireland (2010), Portugal (2011)
and Cyprus (2012). Spanish banks were also given EU loans in 2012. Loans
were granted on the condition that governments implement severe austerity
measures, supervised by EU and IMF experts. These measures led to increased
coordination between the European Commission, ECB and IMF - referred to as
the ‘Troika’. In addition, EU member states agreed a number of measures for
closer surveillance and coordination of budgetary and economic policy
among Eurozone states. These include the so-called ‘six pack’ of legislative
measures, entering into force in December 2011, which covered fiscal and
macroeconomic surveillance and strengthening the Stability and Growth
Pact, and the ‘European semester’, whereby member states coordinate their
economic policies while national budgets are still in preparation. In 2012,
twenty-five EU member states (but not UK and the Czech Republic) signed the
Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance, which introduced new
more stringent surveillance and coordination rules for economic policies.
Furthermore, some of the obstacles to social movement Europeanization
may have been mitigated, if not overcome. Imig and Tarrow, for instance,
have argued that «movements are most likely to take root among pre-existing
social networks in which relations of trust, reciprocity and cultural learning
are stored» (2000, 79). As such, while it is ‘plausible to think of transnational
identities developing around parallel claims in widely differing sites of conflict’, this is more difficult than more local process of identity formation «embedded in everyday life» and involving family, friends neighbors and
work (Imig and Tarrow, 2000: 80). Furthermore, they point to the obstacle of
high «transaction costs of linking [groups in different countries experiencing similar problems] into integrated networks across national boundaries»
(Imig and Tarrow, 2000, 80). However, it may be that technological innovation facilitating communication between actors across national boundaries
(Castells, 2012), as well as the experience gained from the development of
new networks among social movements prior to the crisis could help overcome some of these obstacles. As we spell out in more detail below, Della
Porta and Caiani’s work on European social forums provides evidence to
suggest that some sense of collective identity, social networks of trust, reciprocity and learning may have already taken root among participants in
certain pre-crisis European protests, which addressed issues not dissimilar to
those at the center of many anti-austerity protests (2009).
Índex
37
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
In order to examine the significance of social movement Europeanization, the article begins by presenting a theoretical framework, built on, but
extending, the work of previous studies, to measure the degree of social
movement Europeanization. We then turn to present the outline of a research design which can be employed to examine empirically the degree of
social movement Europeanization. In the final section we present the findings of a pilot study, which focused on social movement mobilization in
Spain and Greece between May and June 2011 and reflect on avenues for
future research. In this section we observe that the largest category of contentious action events in both Spain and Greece was action focusing entirely on
the domestic arena during the period studied. However, in an indication of the
viability of further research on the Europeanization of social movements in
the context of the ESD crisis, we see in the Greek case evidence to suggest a
relatively high degree of Europeanization, given that the percentage of events
which exhibited at least one dimension of Europeanization was higher than
the number of events strictly focused on the domestic arena.
1. DEgREES of EuRoPEAnIzAtIon: movEmEnt StRAtEgy,
IDEntIty AnD hoRIzontAl REfEREnCIng
1.1. Previous work on Europeanization of Social movements
A major preoccupation of the literature on the Europeanization of social
movements hitherto has been with movement strategy. More specifically,
researchers have been particularly interested in the extent to which the
gradual accumulation of decision making and management authority at the
EU level has been accompanied by changes in social movement mobilization
from that principally involving fellow nationals and focused on state actors,
on the one hand, to also involve and target actors and audiences from other
states and the EU, on the other hand (see for example,Tarrow, 1995; Imig and
Tarrow, 2000; Rucht, 2002; Della Porter and Caiani, 2010; Statham and Koopmans, 2010). These studies have helpfully distinguished between ‘non-Europeanized’ grass-roots collective action which does not address EU issues at all
and various forms of Europeanized social movement action.
Imig and Tarrow distinguish between four types of European protests: 1.
Typical Domestic Protests «in which national actors target domestic opponents», effectively non-Europeanization. 2. Coordinated Domestic Protest,
involves a transnational coalition of actors against a domestic political target
Índex
38
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
(such as a national government). 3. Domestication of conflict occurs when
«national actors protest at home against policies of the EU». 4. Transnational contention, in which «transnational coalitions of actors target the EU or
other supranational or transnational actors in response to EU policies» (Imig
and Tarrow, 2000: 78). This last category is subdivided into three further categories: a. International Cooperation, where «actors from various countries
join together in linked and coordinated protest campaigns in each national
setting against a shared antagonist» b. International Conflict, where «protesters have targeted, rather than joining with, their competitors from other
nations»; and c. Collective European Protests, which are «major protest
events [which] draw the participation of citizens from across the EU» (Imig
and Tarrow, 2000: 86-7).
Della Porta and Caiani’s conceptualization of social movement Europeanization builds on and extends Imig and Tarrow’s early approach (Della Porta
and Caiani, 2009). Firstly, Della Porta and Caiani identify a ‘nation-state’
model of Europeanization, where European actors emerge to challenge decision-makers in a European polity in parallel to mobilization by strictly national actors mobilizing only at the national level. More variegated strategies
where social movements simultaneously address various territorial levels
can take different forms. They may take a domestication path, which along
the lines of Imig and Tarrow’s (2000) conception cited above, social movements only mobilize at the national level in order to pressurize national
governments to negotiate on their behalf in EU bodies (Della Porta and
Caiani, 2009: 14). A second type of variegated strategy involves externalization, where national actors «target the EU in an attempt to put pressure on
their own governments» (Della Porta and Caiani, 2009: 15), a strategy which
may be particularly attractive to actors who feel marginalized in domestic
politics. And finally, European social movements may emerge, involving
‘loose networks of national (and even local) and transnational groups’ which
simultaneously target and address claims to various polities, including domestic and European-level decision-makers (Della Porta and Caiani, 2009).
Patterns of mobilization identified by Imig and Tarrow, Della Porta and
Caiani need not be limited to contention arising in EU politics. For instance,
Della Porta and Tarrow employ the concepts of domestication, externalization and transnational collective action (defined as coordinated international campaigns by networks of activists mobilizing against international
actors, other states or international institutions) in work on transnational
movements active on issues of global reach (2005).
Índex
39
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
Implicit in studies such as these is the idea that the degree of social movement Europeanization varies in intensity, with domestication strategies addressing domestic authorities on EU issues arguably displaying a lower degree of Europeanization than the emergence of European social movements.
Nevertheless, overlap in the way in which these typologies distinguish between different forms of mobilization provides the basis for conceptualizing
varying degrees of social movement Europeanization with greater precision.
The typologies principally focus on variation in 1) targets of social movement mobilization, or whether targets are principally domestic authorities,
European authorities (including EU institutions and state authorities abroad),
or both; 2) the nature of movement participants, or whether movement actors take action predominantly alongside fellow domestic actors, fellow European actors or both. A third dimension concerns issue framing and
whether or not the issues provoking mobilization are conceived as predominantly domestic, or predominantly European or a combination of both.
Beyond a focus on movement strategy, the literature on Europeanization
suggests two further elements that are relevant for assessing the degree of
social movement Europeanization. The first concerns issues of identity. As
mentioned above, Imig and Tarrow argue that one of the main the obstacles to transnational protests was the absence of common identities, a
sense of solidarity and «pre-existing social networks in which relations of
trust, reciprocity and cultural learning are stored» (2000: 79-80). This was
because «social networks provide the interpersonal trust, the collective
identities and the social communication of opportunities that galvanize
individuals into collective action and coordinate their actions against significant others in a social movement» (Imig and Tarrow, 2000: 80). However, Della Porta and Caiani provide evidence to suggest that some sense
of collective identity, social networks of trust, reciprocity and learning may
have already taken root among participants in certain joint European protests centred on issues not dissimilar to those at the centre of anti-austerity protests (2009). In their study of European Social Forums and EU counter
summits, Della Porta and Caiani address the role of social movements in
the construction of collective European identities through discourse and
processes of communication (2009). The authors argue that the European
arena offers social movements «opportunities to meet, build organizational
networks, coordinate activity, and construct supranational discourses» and
that «growing interaction facilitates the development of common, more or
less, European identity» (Della Porta and Caiani, 2009: 96). Social movements and non-governmental organizations tended to privilege ties with
Índex
40
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
similar civil society organizations rather than those with institutional actors or interest groups and this tight network of links also «favours the
emergence of shared goals and collective identities on European issues»
(Della Porta and Caiani, 2009: 80). Social movement organizations and nongovernmental organizations are not only more critical towards the EU than
other groups in their country, they are also more likely to frame Europe in
their claims in identity terms by emphasizing «non-material aspects of the
integration process, referring to an identity discourse (such as references
to Europe as a community of values) and constitutional principles (especially democracy)» (Della Porta and Caiani, 2009: 80).
In contrast to much of the literature on European identity, which tends to
equate identification with positive assessments of European integration
(Bourne, 2015), the authors argue that social movements and non-governmental organizations develop the foundations of a common identity through
critiques of contemporary institutions and the desire to construct an alternative Europe. Interview data showed that the emerging critique was not
about «too much Europe’, but ‘not enough social Europe» (Della Porta and
Caiani, 2009: 119). They also expressed criticisms of the perceived democratic deficit of the EU, focusing on the limited powers of the European Parliament, lack of transparency, distance from civil society and accessibility for
citizens. Furthermore, most civil society groups interviewed expressed support for a «different Europe» built from below by a «European movement»
(Della Porta and Caiani, 2009: 123).
A final element draws on the concept of ‘horizontal Europeanization’
(Koopmans and Statham, 2010). This concept is drawn from work on the
Europeanization of communication, which the authors argue is a central
component of «Europe’s ongoing search for a public» (Koopmans and
Statham, 2010: 3). Horizontal Europeanization «consists of communicative
linkages between different European countries» (Koopmans and Erbe, 2003:
6). There is a strong and a weak variant: «In the weak variant, the media in
one country cover debates and contestation in another country, but there is
no communicative link in the structure of claim-making between actors in
different countries» (Koopmans and Statham, 2010: 38). It involves, for instance, the reporting of events in other countries. In the stronger variant,
there is such a communicative link, and actors from one country explicitly
address or refer to actors or policies in another European country’. Here the
communicative link may take the form of external actors commenting on
domestic policy developments or comparison across countries. Given our
Índex
41
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
focus on social movements, rather than the media, the strong variant of
horizontal Europeanization is of particular interest in this research.
1.2. A new framework for measuring the degree of Europeanization
These five dimensions of social movement mobilization – targets, participants, issue framing, identification and horizontal referencing can be combined to produce a new scale identifying six degrees of Europeanization.
Non-Europeanization involves national actors targeting domestic opponents and the issues provoking mobilization are conceived predominantly as
domestic issues. There is no horizontal referencing to other movements or
policies in other countries and no identity claims encompassing groups beyond the boundaries of the state. At the other end of the scale, very high
Europeanization occurs when cross-nationally organized social movements
in Europe target European actors and frame issues as European issues. Elements of the movement make cross-national references to policies or actors
in other countries and make identity claims encompassing groups in other
parts of Europe. Very high Europeanization does not require that social
movement, participants, targets and issue framing are exclusively European
in scope. Such movements may, for instance, simultaneously involve domestic and transnational actors, targeting domestic, EU and transnational authorities. Nevertheless, this conception of Europeanization is more demanding
than that employed in previous work on social movement mobilization, insofar as it also requires evidence of horizontal referencing and identification.
In between non-Europeanization and very high Europeanization are four
additional categories: Very low Europeanization occurs when any one of
the five dimensions of social movement mobilization - targets, participants,
issue framing, identification and horizontal – occurs. Low Europeanization
occurs when any two of the five dimensions of social movement mobilization occur. Moderate Europeanization occurs when any three of the five
dimensions of social movement mobilization occur. High Europeanization
occurs when any four of the five dimensions of social movement mobilization occur.
Índex
42
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
table 1
Degrees of Europeanization
Degree of Europeanization
Number of Social Movement Europeanization dimensions (any of targets, participants, issue framing, identification and horizontal referencing)
Very High
5
High
4
Moderate
3
Low
2
Very Low
1
Non-Europeanization
0
The advantage of this approach is that it provides a more explicit, and
quantifiable, means of measuring social movement Europeanization, and one
which takes into account a broader range of dimensions than previous studies. We acknowledge that this scale is rather abstract in its formulation and
that there may appear to be a measure of arbitrariness in the selection of
dimensions included in the scale. This is difficult to avoid entirely. We have
tried to mitigate this problem by careful attention to a full range of what
existing work on Europeanization suggests are relevant dimensions of social
movement Europeanization. Moreover, we considered whether some dimensions of Europeanization ought to be given more weight in the calculation
of the degree of Europeanization. Weighting one or other dimension more
heavily is likely to have changed our findings. However, there does not appear to be a strong theoretical rationale to attribute, a priori, greater significance to one or other dimension. We hope further empirical analysis will
provide greater insights in this regard.
2. mEthoDS AnD oPERAtIonAlIzAtIon of kEy ConCEPtS
A variety of methods can potentially be employed to examine social
movement Europeanization in the context of the ESD crisis (Bourne and Chatzopoulou, 2015). However, a good starting point for examining the degree of
social movement Europeanization is to employ Political Claims Analysis (PCA)
Índex
43
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
(Koopmans and Statham, 1999; Koopmans and Rucht, 2002). This method
uses newspapers as a primary source of data to collect both quantitative and
qualitative data on a) targets, participants, issues and forms of contentious
action (among other things) and b) the semantic content of claims made in
the public sphere over time and across countries. The units of analysis are
«public acts of claim making», or the strategic demands made by collective
actors «within a specific contested issue field» (Koopmans and Statham,
1999: 206). Instances of claim making involve demands, criticisms or proposals related to the subject of inquiry. Data is collected on the behavior of both
non-state actors, including civil society groups, such as labor unions and
political parties, as well as state actors, such as the police, courts, legislatures
and local, regional and supranational institutions. As Koopmans and Statham
argue, this focus on a broad range of actors has the advantage of shifting «the
focus on inquiry towards the coalitions, networks and conflict lines that connect and relate the different types of collective actors in a multiorganizational field» (1999: 206). PCA examines all forms of claim-making, whether
routine or non-routine, conventional, or non-conventional, ‘physical’ (for example public demonstrations outside public buildings) or discursive (issuing
press releases, consciousness-raising). This has the advantage of permitting
analysis of the range of action repertoires employed, in contrast to protestevent analysis which is too «protest centric» and permits «appreciation of
public discourse as a medium of social conflict and symbolic struggles»
(Koopmans and Statham, 1999: 205).
PCA rests on the assumption that newspapers provide a «continuous record of public events and the visibility of the claims of actors» (Koopmans
and Statham, 1993: 203). Newspapers are also seen as a medium through
which social movements articulate political challenges in the public domain and by which actors «assign meaning to issues» in the public sphere
(Koopmans and Statham, 1993: 203). They provide better and more detailed coverage than radio and television and reach a broad audience
(Koopmans and Rucht, 2002), even if they do not provide the discursively
richest source of analysis compared with other documents (Koopmans
and Statham, 1999). It is also one of the few sources that can be used to
build up systematic and long-term databases on contentious action (Caiani,
Della Porta and Wagerman, 2013: 34: Koopmans and Rucht, 2002). Nevertheless, there are various problems arising from reliance on newspapers as
a primary source of data, including systematic bias in coverage of the types
of demonstrations covered (e.g. large and violent demonstrations more
likely to be covered than smaller ones) and issues around which mobiliza-
Índex
44
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
tion occurs (eg. protest on issues resonating with ‘media issue attention
cycles’ are more likely to be covered than those that are not) (McCarthy et.
al., 1996; Koopmans and Rucht, 2002).
Various strategies can be employed to limit the impact of such problems.
One response to selection bias is to code events reported in multiple newspapers, identifying, matching and combining information on events reported
in different newspapers (Koopmans and Rucht, 2002). Another response is
to employ other sources of data in tandem with newspaper records.1 An additional response to the problem of selection bias is to delimit the nature of
claims made on the basis of newspaper data. This is an approach used by
Della Porta and Caiani who reduce the risks of selection biases introduced
by the practices of journalism by delimiting their research interest specifically to «public claim making – thus in the claims that reach the pages of a
newspaper» (2009: 29). Without denying that some actors are more dependent on the media than others, they argue that «the printed media are one
of the most important areas of public claim-making, and that most actors,
will, at one stage or another, try to make their views public» (2009: 30). In a
similar vein, Koopmans and Statham argue that claims made in newspapers
are the result of «actual strategic actions of the claim makers in the public
sphere» (1999: 216), while Della Porta et al. argue:
With precaution and many interpretative caveats, press-based protest event analysis allows
for controlling, if not the real amount and forms of protest, at least the associations among
specific characteristics of protest repertoires as well as very general trends (Della Porta,
Caiani and Wagerman (2012: 34).
2.1. Pilot study
We use PCA in a pilot study of political claim making events in May and
June 2011 in Greece and Spain. The purpose of the pilot study is to clarify
procedures for operationalizing key concepts, discussed below, and to examine the feasibility of undertaking further investigation on the Europeanization of social movements. Specifically with regard to the latter, we selected two country case-studies and a time period in which mobilization
1
Police records have been one important alternative sources of data on protest events (McCarthy et.
al., 1996; Koopmans and Rucht, 2002), although as Koopmans and Rucht argue, police records may
themselves be subject to selectivity biases (2002, 251). Moreover, as comparisons between reporting
of events from newspapers and police records show, correlations of events reported in newspapers
and police records over the longer term are high, suggesting newspapers may be more reliable than
is sometimes thought (Koopmans and Rucht, 2002, 238).
Índex
45
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
around issues of the ESD crisis were very high. In Spain, mobilization against
austerity crystallized around the Indignados (the outraged) movement, also
known as 15M, signifying the date of the first mobilization on 15 May 2011.
On this date tens of thousands of citizens joined demonstrations around the
country in protest against the Spanish government and EU responses to the
global financial crisis, especially cuts in education, welfare and social problems and expressing frustration at their exclusion from an elitist political
system dominated by the two main center-left and center-right parties, international organizations and financial institutions (Castañeda, 2012;
Hughes, 2011). After the 15 May protests, many stayed on and occupied
public squares around the country for a few weeks, with the biggest demonstrations in the Puerta del Sol in central Madrid and Plaza Cataluña in
Barcelona. Although large scale anti-austerity protests in Greece had taken
place earlier, new austerity measures were announced in May and June
2011 which again provoked the mobilization of the civil society and triggered more street protests.These protests are often referred to as the Greek
‘indignados’ or ‘outraged citizens’, in a clear reference to the example of
the Spanish movement. Incidents of violence against public buildings, and
physical and verbal attacks against public figures (i.e. the President and the
chair of the Parliament) took place on various occasions, especially in the
area in front of the Parliament (Psimitis, 2011). Given the intensity of antiausterity mobilization in Greece and Spain during the time period examined – and the fact that the EU played a high profile role in the promotion
of austerity programs –we can consider these cases as ‘crucial cases’ (Eckstein, 1979). That is, they are cases in which we could expect to find a significant degree of evidence of social movement Europeanization if it could
be found at all. We consider social movement Europeanization to be significant if there are more events with at least one dimension of Europeanization (targets, participants, issues, identities, horizontal referencing) than
those without any Europeanization at all. If we did not find this evidence,
then there would be grounds for considering that further study into social
movement Europeanization may not be very fruitful.
In the pilot study data was retrieved from two national newspapers for
each country (Kathimerini and Avgi for Greece and El Mundo and the
online newspaper, Publico.es for Spain). These newspapers were chosen
because they tend to present political affiliations broadly from the center
right or left in ideological terms. They also represent mainstream and nonmainstream media outlets. They are published and read by national audiences and have a good reputation for their consistent and extensive cover-
Índex
46
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
age. From these newspapers we compiled and analyzed a sample of
contentious actions. We searched for articles on contentious action in the
international and national news sections of the four newspapers. For each
newspaper we read and coded articles for two editions each week (on
Tuesdays and Fridays). We selected articles for analysis if the title or first
two paragraphs indicated they were likely to provide relevant data. We did
not keep a record of events where the target, participants or issue at the
heart of a protest were not clear. We used computer software (MAXQDA) for
managing coded data. Using MAXQDA, we were able to using open-coding to
keep a record of different types of targets, participants, issues, identity statements and horizontal references, as well as information on the forms, size,
place and other features of protest.
In total we observed and coded 163 events for Spain and 148 for Greece
- in total 311 events. We focused on protest by non-state actors, but we also
code protests by representatives of public authorities from multiple territorial levels (domestic, EU and transnational) when they collaborate with those
non-state actors. We included a broad range of contentious action forms,
which ranged from public demonstrations, occupation of public spaces, theatrical events, legal action, public statements and speeches as well as acts of
civil disobedience and violence against property or persons. In future research, we will address issues of social movement mobilization using other
sources of data, including twitter feeds and internet publications.
‘Bottom-up’ Europeanization approach
One final methodological point needs to be made. In Europeanization
research, the distinction between top-down and bottom-up approaches
has long been considered significant from a methodological point of view
(Lyngaard, 2011; Radaelli, 2004). Top-down studies address the impact of EU
integration on the domestic level and usually concentrate on how specific
regulatory frameworks trigger change at the domestic level. On the other
hand, bottom-up Europeanization research designs start from the domestic
level and examine actors, ideas, rules and styles and how they change
through time (Lyngaard 2011). This study is a bottom-up Europeanization
study insofar as we focus analytical attention on movements in Spain and
Greece and their relationships with other domestic, European and transnational actors and arenas. This tends to be a distinctive characteristic of re-
Índex
47
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
search on the Europeanization of social movements in general (eg. Della
Porta and Caiani, 2009: 25).
More fundamentally, one of the advantages of selecting a bottom-up research design over top-down ones is that it permits us to address one of the
principal critiques of Europeanization research, namely the tendency to
overestimate the importance of the EU as an explanatory factor for observed
changes in domestic behavior (Radaelli and Pasquier 2007: 40). In other
words, the problem is that if researchers only focus on European developments they may spuriously attribute changes to European-level events and
processes. Put differently, changes such as the emergence of social movements may in fact be due to a variety of factors – such as domestic corruption scandals, changes in political culture, such as declining trust in political
institutions and political parties, or international factors related to globalization and transnationalization of politics. Our bottom-up research design
permits us to be sensitive to domestic explanations for social movement
mobilization and to deal with transnational dimensions of social movement
mobilization. Specifically with regard to the latter, therefore, we code contentious action where targets, participants, issues, identities and horizontal
references are transnational, in addition to where these dimensions of social movement mobilization can be observed as European.
2.2. operationalizing theoretical concepts
Operationalizing varying ‘degrees of Europeanization’ was a complex
process. As mentioned, one of the main objectives of the pilot study was to
develop clear procedures for coding data relating to these five key variables,
namely targets of contentious action, participants in that action, how issues
mobilizing protest were framed, identities and horizontal referencing. For the
first four variables, we started by differenting predefined ‘closed’ categories of
‘domestic’, ‘European’ and ‘transnational’. Differentiation among the types of
targets (e.g. governmental executive, business, EU institutions etc), types of participants (e.g. NGOs, platforms, trade unions, unorganized citizens), types of issues (e.g. ESD crisis-related, and non ESD crisis-related) and types of identities
(e.g. national identities, movement identities, European identities, cosmopolitian identities) was not predetermined. We used open-coding – and frequent communication between the coders – to add new codes as they
emerged from data. By definition, the concept of horizontal referencing
could only be coded as either European or transnational (see below).
Índex
48
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
We coded as ‘targets’ of contentious action organizations, institutions or
arenas with decision-making capacity or political influence which appeared
from information provided in the newspaper articles to be either implicitly
or explicitly the subject of contentious action. They correspond to what
Koopmans and Erbe (2003: 9) define as an ‘addressee’, or the actor held responsible for implementing the claim (if agreement could be obtained), or
who is the target of criticism or support.Targets are differentiated according
to whether they correspond to domestic, European and transnational or any
of the combinations (e.g. domestic and EU simultaneously). Targets were almost always named and this made categorization relatively straight-forward.
Examples of targets included both governmental and non-governmental actors such as the state executive, police, judiciary, local and regional governments, trade union, churches, local and transnational-companies, banks, EU
institutions like the Commission or the Council, or international bodies like
the IMF or the TROIKA. For example, in the case of a protest by local government employees in Greece - who were facing unemployment or were not
being paid their salaries because of budget cuts (due to the crisis) - the local
government was coded as target because protestors specifically directed
their attention to this body.2 Sometimes there were multiple targets. If protest focused on a decision taken by the government as a response to a
demand by EU institutions - such as an increase of working hours in the
public sector or decrease in public spending for salaries in order to receive
the EU bailout - the targets are coded as both national government and EU
institutions.3
As mentioned above, in our study we focus on protest by non-state actors,
but we also code protests by representatives of public authorities from multiple territorial levels when they collaborate with those non-state actors.
Participants correspond to what Koopmans and Erbe call the ‘claim maker’
or ‘claimant’, or the actor who makes a demand, proposal, appeal or criticism
(2003: 9). The most common form of participants were - not surpisingly non-governmental organizations, interest groups and platforms. There were
also examples of spontaneous events were participants were often individual citizens. Different types of participants could take part in the same event.
For example, the big demonstration on 5 May 2011 in Greece included mem2
3
Meeting among Kaminis and employees under contract (ΣυνάντησηΚαμίνημεσυμβασιούχους)
(Καθημερινη-Kathimerini 3/05/2011); Kaminis will meet with employees under contract today
(Συνάντηση με τους συμβασιούχους θα έχει σήμερα ο Γ. Καμίνης, (Αυγή in english Avgi),
3 May 2011.
First of May with lay offs and fragmentation (Πρωτομαγιά απολύσεων, περικοπών και... πολυδιάσπασης)(Αυγήin english Avgi), 3 May 2011.
Índex
49
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
bers of trade unions (ΓΣΕΕ,ΓενικήΣυνομοσπονδίαΕργατώνΕλλάδος-
the national trade union of workers; ΑΔΕΔΥ,ΑνώτατηΔιοίκησηΕνώσεων
ΔημοσίωνΥπαλλώλων– the national trade union of civil servants); participants from political parties, from the left (eg.ΣΥΡΙΖΑ); as well as pensioners,
unemployed and unorganized citizens.4 Participants were categoried according to whether they corresponded to domestic, EU and transnational or any
of the combinations (e.g. domestic and EU simultaneously). Most participants
mentioned in newspaper articles were domestic actors, who limited their
critiques and campaigns to the national arena. Where the domestic branch
of a European or transnational participant (such as Amnesty International
or Anonymous) predominated, we coded as both domestic and EU/or
transnational. A participant was coded as European or transnational if its
title or aims covered either the geographical scope of Europe or for transnational participants, beyond Europe. Participants were also coded as European if membership clearly extended to groups in other European countries. They were coded as transnational if that membership clearly
extended beyond Europe. Mixed categories involved participants from
various territorial arenas, for example, a conference on the ESD crisis which
included academics, activists, unionists, artists from domestic, European
and transnational arenas.5
Issues were perhaps the most difficult dimension to code as either domestic, European or transnational in a consistent manner. An ‘issue’ can be
defined as ‘the substantive content of the claim, stating what is to be done
(aim) and (why?)’ (Koopmans and Erbe, 2003: 9). In many cases, the territorial scope of the issue frame was clear from the way in which participants
targeted their claims to authorities in particular territorial arenas or from the
membership of the organizations set up to campaign on particular issues.
Other times, the territorial scope of the issue was extrapolated from the
claims made by activists themselves. In some instances issues were articulated in one arena, but had clear relevance beyond it. For example, the actions of the Spanish organization Plataforma Afectados por la Hipoteca
(Platform Affected by Mortgage), which campaigned for the rights of Spanish
mortgage holders, dealt with an issue that potentially related to policies enacted by local, regional, state, EU and international authorities and the conduct of domestic, European and transnational banking organizations. The
4
5
Dynamic participation in the gathering in Thessaloniki (Δυναμικό«παρών»στιςσυγκεντρώσειςτης
Θεσσαλονίκης), (Αυγή in english Avgi), 3 May 2011.
The onerous Greek debt in the microscope of the international conference (Τοεπαχθέςελληνικό
χρέοςστομικροσκόπιοτουδιεθνούςσυνεδρίου), (Αυγή (in English Avgi), 6 May 2011.
Índex
50
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
broad scope of the issue at the heart of the organization’s objective was
particularly apparent in the context of the transnational financial crisis,
where EU authorities played a crucial role and in a state (Spain) which was
so seriously affected by the ESD crisis. However, protests outside the homes
of people facing eviction organized by PAH and (often supported by M-15
activists) were coded as a domestic issue, because the acts themselves primarily targeted Spanish authorities and banks in Spain, and sought to highlight injustices in Spanish banking practices.6 In short, we considered an issue as domestic if it was specifically linked to a domestic decision or a
domestic political arena even if it could, in general, be related to a broader
EU or transnational issue (other examples include rights of children, political
violence or xenophobia).
We coded identity statements from reported speeches of activists. Identity statements included references to solidarity, communities of fate and
interest and included both territorial identities and social identities formed
around cleavages including class, gender, generations, but also movements
themselves. Identity statements were categorized as domestic, European and
transnational depending on the content of those statements. In some instances, speakers specifically referred to territorially defined identities, such
as references to the plight of ‘young Spaniards’ by the platform Juventud Sin
Futuro (Youth Without Future), or reports of placards in the Plaza del Sol
occupation in May 2011 referring to ‘Peoples of Europe, rise up’. Transnational identities referred more generally, for example, to ‘all humanity’ or all
those who inhabit ‘the world’. Other times, the territorial scope of identity
statements were less explicit, but could be gleaned from other information
provided by the context in which identity statements were made. This was
most common for statements categorized as domestic identity statements.
For instance, statements by 15M activists on movement identity – such as
claims that the movement was non-violent and non-partisan - were coded as
domestic when made in the context of protests targeting domestic institutions or referring to domestic events. Movement identities were also coded
as domestic if made by organizations primarily operating in the domestic
arena, such as those by activists of the various victims of terrorism associations in Spain.
As mentioned above, we only coded instances of what Koopmans and
Statham define as strong horizontal Europeanization (and transnationalization) because this concept focuses on communicative linkages between ac-
6
Riera, J ‘Activistas del 15-M vuelven a impedir dos desahucios judiciales’, El Mundo, 17 June 2011.
Índex
51
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
tors at different territorial levels. As it will be recalled, horizonal referencing
of this kind occurs when there is also ‘a communicative link in the structure
of claim-making between actors in different countries’ or ‘actors from one
country explicitly address or refer to actors or policies in another European
country’ (Koopmans and Statham, 2010: 38). When references were made to
groups, policies or events in another European country (or groups of them)
we coded these as European. Most horizontal referencing was made by Spanish or Greek activists to activists in other countries. When references were
made to groups, policies or events in countries (or groups of them) beyond
Europe we coded these as transnational. In some instances, horizontal referencing took the form of direct interpersonal communication, learning and
exchange of information between activists from different countries. For example, when a newspaper article reports protestors in Greece making references to the Indignados in Spain, these references were coded as horizontal
Europeanization.7 However, it was not necessary for activists to be Spanish
for horizontal referencing to occur and we coded as such. For example,
manifestations in Paris to protest against eviction of protestors occupying
the Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona were coded as horizontal Europeanization.8
3. fInDIngS of thE PIlot StuDy
As Figure 1 shows, the largest number of events in both Spain and Greece
were characterized as non-Europeanized, which occurs when all dimensions
are characterized as domestic. In Spain a total of 144 out of 163 events examined were classed as non-Europeanized. In other words, the pilot study
shows that non-Europeanized events were not only the largest category,
there were many more events in which there was no Europeanization (88%)
than there were events with at least one dimension of Europeanization
(12%). In Greece, the largest category of events examined were also classified as non-Europeanized, with 55 out of 148 events. However, in contrast to
the Spanish case, in Greece many more events exhibited at least one dimension of Europeanization (63%) than the number of those that exhibited no
Europeanization at all (37%). In other words, Europeanization is significant
in Greece, but not in Spain.
7
8
Spain: Crash of the Socialist in the polls (Ισπανία:τωνσοσιαλιστώνστιςκάλπες), (Αυγή in English
Avgi), 24 May 2011.
‘Los desalojados del 15-M de Lleida denunciarán a los Mossos’, Publico.es, 31 May 2011.
Índex
52
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
The results of the pilot study are presented in Figure 1.
figure 1
Degrees of Europeanization (in Percentages)
We can begin to account for this finding with reference to disaggregated
data presented in Figure 2.
Targets (percentage of events)
Participants (percentage of events)
Índex
53
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
Issues (percentage of events)
Identification (percentage of events)
DOM=Domestic; EU=European; TR=Transnational; DOMEU= Domestic and European; DOMTR=Domestic and
Transnational; DOMEUTR=Domestic, European and Transnational and EUTR=European and Transnational.
Horizontal referencing (number of events)
Índex
54
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
Note: The numbers on top of each column indicate the total number of events with identity statements.
figure 2
territorial dimensions of social movement targets, participants,
issue frames, identiication and horizontal referencing
This data shows that for almost all of the dimensions, social movement
activity can be largely characterized as domestic in orientation. In both Spain
and Greece social movements targeted domestic actors in their protests
more often than other kinds of actors, although it is notable that in Greece,
the second highest target type is a composite category, where social movements targeted domestic, EU and transnational actors simultaneously. In both
Spain and Greece most participants were characterized as domestic actors
while identity statements, when made, mostly referred to identities territorially bound by the state, such as national identities, or movement identities.
Regarding issues, it was most common for social movement actors in Spain
to frame issues as domestic. However, in an indication of the source of significant differences between the two cases it can be seen that in Greece, the
most common kind of issue framing was a composite category, where issues
were framed simultaneously as domestic, European and transnational. We
found very little evidence of horizontal referencing, perhaps reflecting the
observation that newspaper articles are not the discursively most rich
source of data (Koopmans and Statham, 1999: 216).
Our last finding picks up on the above-mentioned methodological critique that Europeanization research tends to overestimate the importance of
Europe as an explanatory factor for domestic changes. As mentioned previously, and as Figure 2 shows, there is a non-negligible number of events
where all three territorial arenas are relevant in a single dimension. This is
Índex
55
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
most apparent for the issues dimension, where 40% of events were categorized as domestic, European and transnational simultaneously in Greece (although only 4% of events for Spain). It is also relevant in the targets category
for Greece, where 28% of events were categorized as domestic, European
and transnational simultaneously, although again at a lower level in Spain
with 2%. Figure 3 also shows that Europeanization of social movements has
been accompanied by processes of transnationalization.
figure 3
Degrees of transnationalization (in Percentage)
It also notable that there are some parallels in the frequency with which
events are categorized as a different degree of Europeanization and Transnationalization in each of the two countries. Figures are too low to meaningfully compare ‘very high’, ‘high’ and ‘moderate’ categories in each of the two
countries. However, Spanish events categorized in the ‘very low’ category
were similar - 4% of events have a Europeanization dimension and 1% have
a Transnationalization dimension - while in the ‘low category’ 4% of events
Índex
56
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
were categorized as Europeanization and 5% as Transnationalization. Similarly, in Greece, 21% of events correspond to Europeanization in the ‘very
low’ category while there are 14% for Transnationalization. In the ‘low’ category the percentages for Greece were 32% and 29% respectively. This suggest that separating out Europeanization and Transnationalization processes
may be problematic, but that more work is needed to conceptualise how the
two processes are interrelated.
4. DIRECtIonS foR futuRE RESEARCh
In the first place, our research suggests that the Europeanization of social
movements in the context of the ESD crisis is worthy of further research.This
is because in at least one of the cases – Greece – there were more events
with at least one dimensions of social movement Europeanization than
those that showed no dimensions of Europeanization. Further research will
need to determine whether the periods under examination in both countries represent broader trends. It may be that Europe becomes more or less
important at different times. In order to focus on the importance of the ESD
crisis in mobilization, it will be necessary that this extended time frame include periods before and after the crisis. It would also be fruitful to examine
a broader range of cases, including states that have emerged through the
course of the crisis as creditor countries (such as Germany or Denmark) and
debtor countries (such as Portugal, Cyprus or Ireland).
The very clear variation between the Spanish and Greek cases – both
in the ‘eye of the storm’ of the ESD crisis, at least during the period studied
– suggests particular attention should be paid to accounting for variation
among the cases. In our pilot study, for instance, a careful reading of newspaper articles in the sample indicated that differences in the degree of
Europeanization might be explained by the different roles played by EU
institutions and the IMF in managing the ESD crisis in the two countries. At
the time of the sample (May and June 2011), many protests in both countries focused on the economic crisis and its consequences, such as budget
cuts, housing evictions, or changes to working conditions. Greece had obtained the first of three bailouts from the EU and the IMF and was negotiating a second, while Spanish banks were only given a bailout, under much
softer terms, at a date later than the time of our sample. While social movements in both countries did focus critical attention on the activities of the
EU (and transnational) organizations in their protests, it was much more
Índex
57
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
common for Greek activists to claim that the domestic, EU and transnational political elites were equally responsible for the crisis and its management. The frequent visits of the Troika to Greece at this time, which coincided with negotiations for a second bailout, were the focus of many
protest activities. In contrast, crisis-related activism, particularly mobilization by movements such as 15M, focused much more attention on critiques
of the democratic credentials of the political class. Other explanatory hypotheses for variation among the cases that could influence case selection
for future studies could reflect the hypothesis that varying degrees of social movement moblizations may reflect varying degrees of Euroscepticism
in the member states or that mobilization outside the state may be more
common where domestic opportunity structures are more closed to civil
society penetration. And finally, analysis of different kinds of data can be
employed to supplement that of newspapers, especially from websites of
specific organizations and social media postings. This is particularly important for examining the significance of the dimensions of ‘horizontal referencing’ and ‘identification’ which newspaper articles did not address in
much detail. Analysis of this kind of data may also generate new hypotheses about the relationship between Europeanization and Transnationalisation, which our data suggests are both prevalent to a significant extent in
contentious action, at least during the period we examined.
REfEREnCES
BOURNE, A. (2014): «European identities: Conflict and Cooperation», in LYNGAARD, K., I. MANNERS, and K. LÖFGREN, Research Methods in European
Union Studies, Houndsmills, Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 5571.
CASTELS, M. (2012): Networks of Outrage and Hope, Cambridge, Polity Press.
CASTAÑEDA, E. (2013): «The Indignados of Spain: A Precedent to Occupy Wall
Street», Social Movement Studies, 11(3-4), pp. 309-319.
DELLA PORTA, D. and M. CAIANI (2009): Social Movements and Europeanization, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
DELLA PORTA, D. and S. TARROW (2005): Transnational Protest and Global Activism, Rowman and Littlefield Publishers.
DELLA PORTA, D., M. CAIANI and C.WAGEMANN (2012): Mobilizing on the extreme
right: Germany, Italy, and the United States, Oxford, Oxford University
Press.
Índex
58
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
DELLA PORTA, D and A. MATTONI, A (eds.) (2014): Spreading Protest, Essex, ECPR
Press.
FLESHER FORMINAYA, C. and L. COX (2013): Understanding European Movements, London, Routledge.
FLESHER FORMINAYA, C. (2014): Social Movements and Globalisation, Houndsmills, Palgrave Macmillen.
HUGHES, N. (2011): «Young people took to the Streets and all of a Sudden all
of the Political parties got old: The 15M Movement in Spain», Social
Movement Studies, 10(4), pp. 407-13.
IMIG, D. and S. TARROW (2000): «Political contention in a Europeanising polity»,
West European Politics, 23(4), pp. 73-93.
KALDOR M., S. SELCHOW, S. DEEL,T. and MURRAY-LEACH (2013): «The ‘Bubbling Up’
of Subterranean Politics in Europe», Project Report Civil Society and
Human Security Research Unit, London School of Economics and Political Science. Available at: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/44873/1/The%20
%E2%80%98bubbling%20up%E2%80%99%20of%20subterranean%20
politics%20in%20Europe(lsero).pdf.
KOOPMANS, R. and D. RUCHT (2002): «Protest Event Analysis» in KLANDERMANS B.,
and S. STAGGENBORG (eds): Methods of Social Movement Research, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, pp. 231-259.
KOOPMANS, R. and P. STATHAM (1999): «Political Claims Analysis: Integrating Protest Event and Political Discourse Analysis», Mobilisation, 4(1), pp. 203221.
KOOPMANS R. and J. Erbe (2003): «Towards a European Public Sphere? Vertical and Horizontal Dimensions of Europeanised Political Communication», Best.-Nr. SP IV 2003-403 Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB).
KOOPMANS, R. and P. STATHAM (eds) (2010): The Making of a European Public
Sphere: Media Discourse and Political Contention, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
KOOPMANS, R., J. ERBE and M. F. MEYER (2010): The Europeanization of Public
Spheres: Comparisons across Issues, Time and Countries, Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press.
KOUSIS, M. (2014): «The Transnational Dimension of the Greek Protest Campaign against Troika Memoranda and Austerity Policies, 2010-12», in
DELLA PORTA, D and A. MATTONI (eds): Spreading Protest, Essex, ECPR press,
pp. 137-170.
Índex
59
ANGELA BOURNE AND SEVASTI CHATZOPOULOU Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization
LYNGGAARD, K. (2011): «Domestic change in the face of European integration
and globalization: Methodological pitfalls and pathways», Comparative
European Politics, .9(1), pp. 18-37.
MARKS G. and MCADAM (1996): «Social Movements and the Changing Structure
of Political Opportunity in the European Union», West European Politics,
19(2), pp. 249-278.
MCCARTHY. J., C. MCPHAIL and J. SMITH (1996): «Images of Protest: Dimensions of
Selection Bias in Media Coverage of Washington Denmonstrations, 1982
and 1991», American Sociological Review, 16(3), pp. 478-499.
PSIMITIS, M. (2011): «The protest Cycle of Spring 2010 in Greece, Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social Protest», Cultural and Political Protest,
10(2), pp. 191-197.
RADAELLI, C. (2004): «Europeanization: Solution or problem?», European Integration online Papers, 8(16), pp. 1–26.
REISING, K. (1999): «United in Opposition? A Cross-National Time-Series Analysis of European Protest in Three Selected Countries, 1980-1995», The
Journal of Conflict Resolution, 43(3), pp. 317-342.
RUCHT, D. (2002): «The EU as a Target of Political Mobilisation: Is there a
Europeanization of Conflict?» In BALME, R., D. CHABANET, and V. WRIGHT
(eds.): L’action Collective en Europe, Paris, Presses de Sciences Po.,
pp. 110-137.
SMITH, J. (2007): «Transnational Processes and Movements in Snow», in Soule
D,m and H-P. KRIESI, (eds): The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements, Oxford, Blackwell, pp. 311-335.
SMITH J. (2002): «Organizing for Global Change: Organizational Strength and
Strategic Framing» in Transnational Social Movement Organizations.
Unpublished Paper, Stony Brook, NY.
TARROW, S. (1995): «The Europeanization of Conflict. Reflections from a Social
Movement Perspective», West European Politics, 18, pp. 223-251
TEJERINA, B. PERUGORRIA, I. BENSKI, T and LANGMAN, L (2013): «From indignation to
occupation:A new wave of global mobilization», Current Sociology, 61(4),
pp. 377-392.
WORTH, O. (2013): Resistance in the Age of Austerity, London, Zed Books.
Índex
60
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.3 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 33-60
APPEnDIx 1
number of events for each ‘degree’ of Europeanization
and transnationalization
Degree of Europeanization/
SPAIN
(163)
Transnationalization
Europeanization
Transnationalization
Europeanization
Transnationalization
Very High (5)
3
2
1
1
High (4)
0
0
6
0
Moderate (3)
2
6
8
4
Low (2)
7
8
47
43
Very Low (1)
7
17
31
20
144
130
55
80
Non-Europeanization/ Non
Transnationalisation (0)
Source: compiled by authors
Índex
GREECE (148)
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 61-83
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4
Emotional Politics on facebook. An Exploratory
Study of Podemos’ Discourse during the European
Election Campaign 2014
Política y emociones en Facebook. Un estudio
exploratorio del discurso de Podemos en la campaña
electoral europea de 2014
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ
DEPARTMENT OF THEORY OF LANGUAGES AND COMMUNICATION SCIENCE, UNIVERSITY OF VALENCIA
Artículo recibido: 26 marzo 2015
Artículo aceptado: 28 abril 2015
Abstract
The results of the European elections 2014 in Spain were characterized by the outstanding rise of a new party, Podemos, which obtained five seats in the European Parliament,
despite being founded few months before the elections. The present study analyzes both
the content and the presence of emotions in Podemos’ discourse on Facebook during the
European electoral campaign. In particular, the affective content of both the party’s discourse and the comments of its followers will be analyzed through a pragmatic linguistic
approach applied to a corpus of 163 posts and 215 followers’ comments. Results show an
insistence on positive emotions in the party’s discourse and a prevalence of negative emotions in the comments of the citizens.
Keywords: political discourse, European elections, Facebook, emotions, Podemos
Resumen
Los resultados en España de las elecciones al Parlamento Europeo de 2014 se caracterizaron por el surgimiento de un nuevo partido, Podemos, que, a pesar de haber sido fundado pocos meses antes de las elecciones, obtuvo cinco escaños en el Parlamento Europeo.
En este trabajo analizamos el contenido y la presencia de emociones en el discurso de
Podemos en Facebook durante la campaña electoral europea. Concretamente, se analiza el
contenido afectivo del discurso del partido y de los comentarios de sus seguidores mediante una aproximación lingüística pragmática aplicada a 163 posts y 215 comentarios. Los
Índex
62
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
resultados muestran una insistencia en emociones positivas por parte del partido y una
prevalencia de emociones negativas en los comentarios de los internautas.
Palabras clave: discurso político, elecciones europeas, Facebook, emociones, Podemos
IntRoDuCtIon
The electoral campaign for the European Parliament Election in May 2014
found Spain in a multiple-crisis environment. In addition to the deep economic crisis and the social tensions derived from the austerity policies, the
country was facing several political and institutional problems, such as the
Catalan independence movement or the many corruption scandals affecting the central political parties. These circumstances, among others, led the
Spanish citizenry to develop strong attitudes of mistrust and cynicism against
political parties, politicians and politics itself, as shown by successive polls.1
This political scenario witnessed the emergence of a new political force,
called Podemos, that was officially founded on January 16th, that is, four
months ahead the European elections. Its main leader, Pablo Iglesias Turrión,
PhD in Political Science and university professor, was a well-known political
analyst in different television shows. Indeed, his popularity and his constant
appearance in televised political debates helped him publicize his political
project during the months before the elections.
Podemos was one of the new parties born before the European elections,
which were inheritors of the 15M Movement, as it was the case of Partido X.
All these parties made a massive use of the new communication channels
during the campaign. According to Sanjuan (2015), Podemos had a website
with detailed information on the European election and open to a participatory process, a Facebook account with a growing number of followers
(149.000 during the campaign), an official Twitter account with 43.200 followers at the time of the election (besides personal accounts of the party’s
leaders), more than 7.700 followers in its YouTube channel and an account
on Vimeo. Podemos presented itself as a party open to a participatory process, formed by ordinary citizens who were disenchanted with the traditional political parties and willing to get involved in public life. Its intense
1
See for example, the polls of the Spanish Centre for Sociological Research (CIS), which asks in periodical monthly surveys for the main problems that Spain is facing according to the citizenry. The results of the polls can be accessed at http://www.cis.es/cis/opencm/EN/11_barometros/depositados.
jsp.
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
rise in popularity translated into 8% of the total votes and five seats in the
European Parliament.
This study aims to analyze the party discourse on Facebook during the
European campaign 2014, focusing on the posts published on the party’s Facebook profile and paying special attention to the emotional content of both
the posts and the comments published by Podemos followers.2
2. thEoREtICAl bACkgRounD
2.1. Internet and electoral campaigns
Political communication research has shown that electoral campaigns in
Western countries are undergoing a process of modernization, whose main
objective is to achieve the maximum level of electoral effectiveness through
a series of techniques imported from corporate marketing (Maarek, 2009)
and different refined ways of attracting media attention (Swanson and Mancini, 1996; Gibson and Römmele, 2007).
Since the emergence of the Internet in the 90s, political parties have been
adapting themselves to the new tools provided by the Web 2.0 to the rhythm
of the technological innovations and the process of citizen appropriation, in
such a way that each election has been accompanied by numerous technopolitical innovations: blogs, video channels on YouTube, social networks, etc.
(Dader, 2009). Thus, while the Internet seemed to give parties a platform to
recover the political message (Bimber and Davis, 2003), i.e., to bypass the
media machinery and reach militants and voters through websites (Sey and
Castells, 2006; Chadwick, 2006), the Internet has been gradually incorporated as another element of the overall campaign strategy.
Despite the technological optimism that accompanied the expansion of
the Internet, several studies about the partisan use of Internet generally suggest that parties have used these tools as a forum to deploy their persuasivestrategic discourse and attract media attention, rather than to recover a di-
2
This study has been realized under the research project Communication flows in processes of political mobilization: the media, blogs and opinion leaders (MEDIAFLOWS) (2014-2016), funded by
the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Ref. CSO2013-43960-R). Its principal researcher is Guillermo López, Professor of Journalism at the Department of Theory of Languages and Communication at the University of Valencia.
Índex
63
64
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
rect link with voters (Norris, 2003),3 especially in the Spanish context (Dader,
2009; Dader et al., 2011). In this way, the accumulated experience seems
to confirm the normalization hypothesis, namely, the idea that the technopolitical practices of the Internet reproduce the main features of the offline
campaigns (Druckman, Kifer and Parkin, 2010; Schweitzer, 2009). In other
words, political actors are using the Internet mainly in order to foster marketing purposes, not to stimulate political pedagogy or to promote debate
among citizens. But the political use of the Internet is not limited to electoral
processes.There is, in fact, an intense academic debate on the impact of digital communication on the form and practice of politics in Western democracies. Scholars generally agree that the Internet has notably opened bottomup communication channels in political processes (Gibson and Römmele,
2007; Castells, 2009). More specifically, ICTs have been conceived as a tool
to face the growing citizen dissatisfaction towards democracy (Bentivegna,
2006), since social media allow for the direct contact between political actors and citizens and provide for new ways of political engagement. In that
sense, cyber-optimist scholars claim that the Internet has positive effects on
political participation (Lévy, 2004; Jenkins, 2008), especially intensifying the
participation of people already interested in politics (Dader, 2001, 2003) or
even reaching new groups (Rheingold, 2004). For their part, cyber-pessimists
highlight the resistance to change and democratization of political elites and
the lack of interest of the majority of the citizenry in politics (Davis, 2001;
Anduiza et al., 2010).
2.2. Emotions in political discourse
Political communication scholarship has primarily showed a formalist approach when analyzing online political discussions,4 since most researchers
have relied on normative notions of deliberation and operationalized its different conditions (Dahlgren, 2000; 2005; Camaj et al., 2009; Freelon, 2010;
Ruiz et al., 2010; Valera, 2012; 2014a).
Over the last decades, several authors have emphasized that the study of
emotions may help understand social behavior and collective action processes.
3
4
Among the exceptions, it is worth mentioning the innovative use of ICT in some foreign campaigns,
such as those of Howard Dean (Sey et al., 2006; Jenkins, 2008; Dader, 2009), Ségolène Royal (Montero,
2009) and Barack Obama (Turiera-Puigbò, 2009).
To the best of our knowledge, Graham (2010) is among the few scholars who have taken a tentative
to move beyond the formal notions of deliberation. His research analyzed the interaction between
deliberation and humor, emotional comments and acknowledgments.
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
According to Collins (1999), emotions bind society and motivate initiative in
social interaction.
Different scholars point out the crucial role of emotions in constructing
the identity of social movements (Melucci, 1995; Goodwin, Jasper and Polletta, 2001), since they play a key role in gathering people together, providing a sense of group identity and promoting collective action to achieve
specific purposes. This crucial role of emotions does not imply that social
movements’ members are simply irrationally driven or have no long-term
commitment to it. Even though the emotional energy is the primary attractor, there are people who internalize these emotions, and who are strongly
motivated and committed to the cause in rational terms.
According to Collins (2001), the collective rituals that take place within
social movements generate two different emotional transformations. At the
time of the movement formation, emotions tend to be mostly negative, since
their members experience certain aspect of social life as deeply unfair and
therefore mobilize to design a plan for action. In fact, one of the means for
social movements to defy their enemies is the recreation of this initial vigor.
Then, however, the group generally transforms the negative feelings into positive emotions, which strengthen the sense of group identity and solidarity.
This study constitutes an exploratory research into the presence of emotions in electoral discourse through social media. We assume that emotions
were particularly important in Podemos’ discourse during the European election campaign for different reasons. First, the party emerged a few months
before the elections with a strong heritage of different organizations, such
as the platform PAH (Plataforma de Afectados por la Hipoteca),5 or the 15M
Movement, etc. Second, researchers have pointed out the prevalence of persuasion and emotional appeals in the use of ICT by political parties during
electoral campaigns.
The research questions that guided this study are the following:
• What kind of content prevails in Podemos’ political discourse on Facebook? Does the party focus on ideological and programmatic stances
or does it rather insist on campaign issues?
5
Platform of People Affected by Mortgages (Plataforma de Afectados por la Hipoteca in Spanish) was
a citizens’ response to the generalized housing problems that emerged after the economic crisis and
the end of the construction bubble, when a lot of citizens lost their jobs and started to be unable to
pay their mortgages. Banks would then retain the house property and evict them from their homes.
Platform actions have been primarily directed to stopping evictions and trying to negotiate with the
banks alternative solutions.
Índex
65
66
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
• What kind of emotions does the party convey through its Facebook
profile? Do they harp on existing negative feelings such as mistrust and
cynicism towards traditional politics? Or does it run an online campaign appealing to positive emotions such as enthusiasm and hope for
political change?
• What are the emotional responses of the followers to the party’s discourse? Do the comments of the followers exhibit emotional involvement?
• Is there a relationship between the content of the posts and the emotions conveyed by them?
3. mEthoDology
This study analyzes the discourse of Podemos and its followers on the
party’s Facebook profile during the European campaign 2014 through two
methodological approaches. First, content analysis is applied to all the posts
published during the campaign in order to assess what types of issues were
specially emphasized by Podemos. Second, the presence of emotions in both
the posts and the comments is analyzed through the means of a pragmatic
linguistic approach.
3.1. Sample and time frame
The corpus consists of all the posts published by Podemos in its Facebook
profile during the official time frame of the electoral campaign in Spain (9th
to 23rd May 2014). These posts with all their respective comments were retrieved and saved by means of the research software NodeXLGraph.6 In total,
163 posts and 7578 comments were collected. The analysis focuses on all
the posts published by the party (n=163) and a sample of the comments. In
order to select the sample, five posts were randomly chosen (post number
7, 56, 80, 93 and 161) and all the corresponding comments (n=215) were
included in the analysis.
6
Available at: http://nodexl.codeplex.com/.
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
3.2. Content analysis
The content of the posts was categorized according to the classification
scheme of electoral discourse proposed by López and adapted by Valera and
López (2014). It includes four possible categories:
1. Ideological and programmatic issues: principles, values, ideological positions, policy proposals;
2. Campaign issues: political polling, propaganda, election ads, campaign
events, debates, campaign strategies;
3. Candidates’ character traits or personal issues;
4. Government management (any information evaluating the performance of a concrete government or official).
Two raters classified the content of a sample of 50 posts (30% of the
sample). Inter-rater reliability was calculated using Cohen’s Kappa (k) statistics to correct for chance agreement. The overall agreement was adequate
enough (k=0.62). As a consequence, the content rating was continued only
by one rater.
In addition to this methodological design, we also analyzed the deliberative nature of the posts published by Podemos, in order to observe if its
Facebook profile was actually being used for citizen deliberation. We did so
through a concept elaborated by Valera (2014b) named “political density” or
“deliberability”, which refers to discourse that contains any statement that
can be rationally debated. Generally, any post including an ideological or
programmatic statement can be rationally discussed and argued among users (see example 1), while other posts including information about electoral
events cannot (see example 2).
(1) We want quality public infrastructure and not projects for speculation.The caste loves
spending our money benefitting his friends […]. It’s time to chase them (published 10th
May 2014).7
(2) Tomorrow at 18:00 we are organizing a big Podemos meeting in Oviedo with Pablo
Iglesias, Tania González, Estefanía Torres and more people. Are you willing to miss out on
it? Share it and join it! (published 13th May 2014).8
7
8
«Queremos infraestructuras públicas de calidad y no proyectos destinados a la especulación. La casta
es muy aficionada a gastar lo que es de todos en concesiones a sus amigos […].Ya es hora de echarles»
(ndr: all excerpts of Facebook posts have been translated by the authors).
«Mañana a las 18:00 hacemos un gran acto de Podemos en Oviedo con Pablo Iglesias,Tania González,
Estefanía Torres y más. ¿Te lo vas a perder? ¡Comparte y participa!».
Índex
67
68
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
To assess the agreement among coders, inter-rater reliability was calculated using Kappa (k). The results showed that raters were in moderate
agreement (k=0.52). Afterwards, the 42 posts in which raters disagreed were
jointly recoded and three major criteria for the subsequent coding of “deliberability” and “non-deliberability” were established.
3.3. linguistic analysis
Regarding the study of emotions in political discourse, we propose a linguistic approach. Generally, two different methods have been applied to the
linguistic study of emotions: sentiment analysis and pragmatic analysis.While
the first tries to extract emotions through the retrieval of affective words
(e.g. happy, sad, afraid, and so on) through different means (keyword spotting, lexical affinity, statistical methods, etc.), pragmatic analysis studies emotions in the context of a specific discourse.
Indeed, pragmatic research considers that «emotional words are only
one way of grammatically codifying emotions in language» (Bazzanella,
2004). As a consequence, emotional language is always analyzed in the overall context of the discourse. Caffi and Janney (1994) identified six ranges of
emotional devices in language, which have been successfully applied to the
study of computer-mediated discourse (Laflen and Fiorenza, 2012; Vandergriff, 2013).
We chose a pragmatic approach for this exploratory study of emotions
in political discourse for multiple reasons. On the one hand, Facebook posts
are usually short, so the shortness may reduce the presence of explicit emotional words. On the other hand, emotional content may be masked under
the metaphors commonly used in political discourse. As a consequence, in
the current study the presence of emotions in discourse is analyzed using
Caffi and Janney’s (1994) methodology, especially focusing on two types of
emotion markers: evaluation devices and proximity devices.9
The first category is based on the central distinction between positive and
negative evaluations. It includes «all types of verbal and nonverbal choices
that suggest an inferable positive or negative evaluative stance on the part
of the speaker with respect to a topic, part of a topic, a partner, or partners
in discourse» (Caffi et al., 1994, p. 354). For example, a negative evaluation
device frequently repeated by Podemos is the term casta (caste), addressed
9
Other devices mentioned by Caffi et al. (1994) are: specificity devices, evidentiality devices, volitionality devices and quantity devices.
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
to the major Spanish political parties.The word casta (caste) is an emotionalladen word negatively marked.
Proximity devices are based on the central distinction between near and
far and include all types of linguistic choices that create a “distance” between
the speaker and the partners or topics (Caffi et al., 1994, p. 356). Among the
most frequent devices in this category the use of deixis can be mentioned
(personal pronouns, temporal markers, social proximity markers, etc.). Podemos made an attentive use of the first person plural pronouns (we, our).
The inclusive ‘we’ creates proximity with the interlocutor and involve him in
the political choices, a stratagem frequently used in political discourse (cfr.
for example Wilson, 1990). Indeed, the name of the party itself, Podemos,10 is
the first person plural of the verb poder (to can), which clearly echoes Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign slogan «yes, we can».
Therefore, the emotional content of the posts and the comments was
analyzed paying attention to both evaluation devices (emotional-laden lexical choices) and proximity devices (use of pronouns and deixis to create
proximity or distance with followers). The posts were analyzed indicating
whether they conveyed emotions (yes or no). Posts containing emotions
were subsequently classified according to the polarity of the emotions (positive, negative or both). To assess the agreement of the coders, inter-rater reliability was calculated using Kappa (k). The results showed that raters in
this study were in substantial agreement about the presence of emotions
in the posts (k=0.68) and in moderate agreement regarding the polarity of
the posts (k=0.48); due to the qualitative nature of the study, these results
were considered adequate and posts in which raters disagreed were jointly
recoded.
4. RESultS
In general quantitative terms, Podemos’ Facebook use during the electoral
campaign showed a continued activity on the profile. The party posted 163
posts in a period of 14 days (average 11,64 posts per day) and received 7578
comments in total (average 46,49 comments per post).
10 In the lexical analysis of our corpus, podemos was largely the more frequently mentioned word both
in the party’s posts and in the comments. These results are probably attributable not only to the
repetition of the name of the party, but also to the frequency of the modal verb poder (to can).
Índex
69
70
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
4.1. thematic content of the posts
According to the proposed content classification scheme (López and
Valera, 2014), the majority of the 163 posts published by Podemos in its
Facebook profile during the European electoral campaign dealt mainly with
issues related to the campaign itself (Figure 1).
To be precise, 64% of the posts (104 out of 163) focused on information
related to campaign events, campaign strategies, electoral debates, polls, propaganda or results of the election. In other words, most of the party’s discourse on this social network revolved around the campaign itself, while just
33% of the posts contained some ideological or programmatic statement (53
out of 163). These results suggest that Podemos’ use of Facebook during the
European Election campaign was basically strategic, inasmuch as it focused
on the campaign as a horserace.
figure 1
type of content of Podemos’ facebook posts
For their part, only 3% of the posts (five out of 163) contained personal
information about the candidates or discussed the personality of the party’s
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
leaders. This shows that despite the strong leadership and great visibility of
its main leader, Pablo Iglesias Turrión, Podemos avoided to run a campaign
based on this leadership in social media. It rather deployed a grass roots electoral strategy trying to appeal to and mobilize the ordinary citizen.
Finally, just 1% of the posts consisted on a critique to the management
of the incumbent government. This result seems particularly striking, since
most of Podemos’ public discourse has consisted on a fierce and well-justified critique to the traditional political parties and their management on
different levels of government. However, the results suggest that this rather
negative strategy was substituted by a more constructive discourse during
the campaign, as the analysis of emotions will point out later on.
Moreover, the analysis of the political density shows that the posts presented slight more “non-deliberability”. Table 1 reveals that, in fact, 52% of
the posts (84 posts out of 163) did not contain any statement that could
be rationally discussed among the followers, but were centered on specific
campaign information.
table 1
Political density of the posts
Absolute frequency
Relative frequency
Deliberable posts
79
48%
Non-deliberable posts
84
52%
In other words, more than half of the posts published by Podemos during the campaign did not contain any statement that could translate into a
substantial deliberation among the followers. Instead of promoting citizen
discursive interaction, most of the content was designed to publish campaign information, such as concrete campaign events taking place all around
the Spanish territory, or different ways to contribute to the party’s funding.
Still, 48% of the posts did imply taking stances that could be debated among
citizens.
Índex
71
72
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
4.2. Emotions in Podemos’ discourse
The pragmatic analysis of evaluation and proximity devices reveals that there
is a consistent presence of emotions in the analyzed corpus. According to our
analysis, 101 posts out of 163 included some sort of emotional content (62%),
and 62 posts (38%) did not present any emotional content at all (Table 2).
table 2
Emotional content of the posts
Absolute frequency
Relative frequency
Emotional posts
101
62%
Non-emotional posts
62
38%
Total
163
100%
Regarding the polarity of emotions, the majority of the posts had a positive-oriented emotional content (67 posts out of 101). This 66% of posts
containing some sort of positive emotion (such as hope, enthusiasm, etc.) is
in stark contrast with the 13% of the posts that presented negative emotions
(such as cynicism or mistrust).
figure 2
Emotional polarity of Podemos’ facebook posts
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
That is, the party’s discourse during the campaign was characterized by
a significant positive tone, as suggested previously by the content analysis.
Moreover, 21% of Podemos’ publications included both positive and negative
emotions (Figure 2).
4.3. Relationship between topic and emotions
In addition to the analysis of the presence of emotions, we asked ourselves
about the possible relationship between the type of content published by
the party and the presence of emotions. That is, were certain types of content more likely to contain emotions?
table 3
Presence of emotions in different types of content (absolute values)
Type of content/ Presence of emotions
No emotions
Emotions
Total
Ideological/ Programmatic
9
44
53
Campaign
51
53
104
Candidates
2
3
5
Government management
0
1
1
Total
62
101
163
As showed in Table 3, ideological and programmatic posts were far more
likely to include emotional content in comparison to posts related to campaign issues. Indeed, ideological and programmatic posts conveyed emotions
more frequently: 44 out 53 posts (83%) included affective content.11 The association of ideological and programmatic issues with the presence of emotions constitutes an interesting result, showing that the party exposed its
essential ideological stances and programmatic proposals with the help of
emotional devices in order to mobilize the citizenry.
11 Due to the small sample size, no further statistical tests were calculated to analyze the association
between the two variables.
Índex
73
74
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
For their part, campaign-related posts showed a certain degree of balance
among presence or lack of emotions: 51 posts showed no emotions and 53
included some emotional content. In the case of posts about candidates, two
of them showed emotional content and the only post dealing with the government management also had some emotional orientation.
Regarding the polarity of emotions, as showed in Figure 3, half of the
ideological and programmatic posts contained positive emotions (22 posts
out of 44), 8 posts included negative emotions and 14 posts presented both.
Within the posts related to the campaign, most of them contained positive
emotions (43 posts out of 53), while a minority included negative feelings (4
posts) or both positive and negative emotions (6 posts, 14%). The only post
about candidates clearly had a positive emotional content, and the affective
charge of the post on the current government was negative.
figure 3
Polarity of emotions in different types of content
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
4.4 the presence of emotions in the comments
Before analyzing the emotional content of the comments, it is worth considering some basic information about the posts that were randomly selected for analyzing their comments, as their content and emotional value may
influence the subsequent comments (Table 4).
table 4
Posts randomly selected for the analysis of their comments
Post
Type of content
«Deliberability»
Presence
of emotions
Polarity
of emotions
7
Campaign issues
No
Yes
Positive
56
Ideological and
programmatic
issues
Yes
Yes
Positive
80
Campaign issues
No
Yes
Positive
93
Ideological and
programmatic
issues
Yes
Yes
Both
161
Campaign issues
No
Yes
Negative
The results of the analysis of the 215 comments clearly show a very different pattern in comparison with the posts published by the party (Table
5). Most of the comments contained no emotional content at all (154 out of
215), even though programmatic issues were debated, the hope for a political
change repeated in the posts related to campaign issues and posts showed
different emotional polarity. Most of the users only commented once, and
no real debates took place among several users, although two of the posts
randomly chosen showed political density, thus theoretically opening the
way to citizens’ debates. Only less than one third (61 out of 215) expressed
some emotion (Table 5). That is, the party deployed a much more emotional
discourse in this social network than the citizens that got involved in the
online political discussions.
Índex
75
76
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
table 5
Presence of emotions in the comments
Absolute frequency
Relative frequency
No emotions
154
72%
Emotions
61
28%
Total
215
100%
Regarding the polarity of emotions, the results also exhibit another interesting pattern in comparison to the party’s discourse (Figure 4). Indeed,
the majority of the users’ comments contained expressions of negative emotions (31 out of 61), while the posts were overwhelmingly positive, as previously exposed. A third of the comments, however, expressed positive feelings
(33%), while 16% contained both positive and negative emotions.
figure 4
Emotional polarity of the comments
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
In general, the expression of negative emotions in the comments by Podemos’ followers refers to feelings of mistrust, cynicism and disaffection towards political elites. These negative comments, as previously exposed, are
the most common, according to our results. For example, the 6th comment
of post number 7 (example 3), shows a negative orientation towards politicians:
(3) You know, what bothers me is that we are people who have very clear ideas and when
they try to deceive us, they think we’re stupid and we believe everything they say without
consequences, that then we will not remember anything. But that is over, we are not sheep
following the herd [...]12.
In contrast, positive emotional comments refer to feelings like enthusiasm
and hope and they tend to be addressed to Podemos as a party and its potential to promote a political and social change in Spain. For example, the 32nd
comment of post number 80 clearly shows a positive orientation towards
the party and its campaign, as shown in example 4:
(4) Today the act in Alicante was fantastic. The thrill of feeling the people get together.
More than numbers, I would talk about authenticity, and in Podemos’ acts you can breathe
genuine enthusiasm and excitement; it’s moving to see so many people together believing
in the same project13.
5. ConCluSIonS
The last two decades have witnessed an increasing interest of scholars in
the use of the Internet in different political participation and mobilization
processes. The growth and success of social networks have recently moved
academic attention to these new communication platforms. In this article,
we have analyzed Podemos’ use of Facebook during the European election
campaign, as well as the relationship between emotions and political discourse.
According to the content analysis, campaign issues clearly prevailed in
the party’s discourse on Facebook (such as information about multiple cam-
12 «Sabeis [sic] lo que me jode que somos gente que tenemos unas ideas muy claras y que cuando nos
intentan engañar se creen que somos tontos y que nos creemos todo lo que dicen inpunemente [sic]
que no vamos a recordar nada luego pero eso se acabo [sic] no somos ovejas de su rebao [sic] […]».
13 «Tremendo hoy el acto de Alicante. La emoción de sentir que el pueblo se une. Más que de números,
yo hablaría de autenticidad, y en los actos de Podemos se respira auténtica ilusión y emoción de ver
a tanta gente junta creyendo en un mismo proyecto […]».
Índex
77
78
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
paign events, or about different ways to financially support the party), while
ideological and programmatic-laden contents were less frequent. This confirms that Podemos’ use of the Internet was electorally driven, since they
mainly used it as a tool to deploy their persuasive-strategic discourse, instead
of trying to recover a direct link with voters or promote citizen deliberation
(Dader et al., 2011). In that sense, our results with regards to the topics and
the limited “deliberability” (Valera, 2014b) of the posts contribute to ratify
the normalization hypothesis (Schweitzer, 2009; Druckman et al., 2010).
Despite the formal bias of political communication research when dealing with online political discussions, this study presents an exploratory research of the presence of emotions on the party’s discourse. Emotions are
considered important in the emergence and strengthening of political and
social movements (Collins, 2001), such as the 15M Movement (Belli and Díez,
2013), the Obama’s campaign 2008 (Castells, 2009), or the MAS movement in
Bolivia (Errejón, 2012).
Following a pragmatic linguistic approach, this research has shown a significant presence of emotions in Podemos’ discourse on Facebook. These
emotions were mainly positive during the campaign, since the party repeatedly appealed to feelings like enthusiasm and hope for a political change to
promote mobilization.These results are in big contrast with Podemos’ public
discourse before the campaign, which consisted on a well-justified and systematic critique of the traditional Spanish political parties.
Moreover, our results reveal that ideological and programmatic posts were
more likely to contain emotions, thus confirming the idea that emotions play
an important role in processes of political and social mobilization, especially
in the early stages of the building of a new political and social movement
(Collins, 2001). But there were also some negative emotions found in Podemos’ discourse, mainly associated to Spanish traditional political parties.That
is, Podemos’ discourse during the campaign 2014 was consistently presented
with an emotional tone, mainly positive (hope for a change and confidence
on the party) but also negative (critiques and attacks against the “caste”).
According to the analysis of emotions in the development of social movements elaborated by Collins (2001), movements start from negative feelings
against people, institutions or organizations that threaten their main values,
and then they move to more positive feelings, such as pride or hope. The
negative emotions of the 15M Movement were addressed to traditional political actors and institutions, which were considered corrupted, degraded and
inadequate to solve social problems. In that sense, our analysis of emotions in
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
both the party’s discourse and the comments shows a very interesting result
and a marked discrepancy.
On the one hand, the results suggest that Podemos tried to convert these
first negative emotions against traditional parties into positive feelings during the campaign, placing itself in the political scenario as a source of hope
and change, as argued by Collins (2001) in his conception of the two emotional stages of social movements.
On the other hand, just a minority of followers’ comments had some
emotional content and most of them showed a lack of political density.
In their majority posts were simple repetitions of campaign slogans, or
questions about practical campaign issues, and citizens rarely involved in
real political debates. Moreover, emotionally laden comments mainly conveyed expressions of negative emotions, such as mistrust or cynicism, in
stark contrast with the party’s predominant positive emotional tone. It is
therefore reasonable to assume that the party’s support and its surprising
electoral mobilization were achieved through the negative motivations of
its followers. In other words, while the party was already trying to move to
a more positive discourse that could transform the citizen disenchantment
into social change, the electoral base of the party remained mainly at an
earlier stage, expressing negative feelings against traditional political actors
and politics in general.
In conclusion, this study constitutes a first attempt to analyze the presence of emotions in political discourse through social networks. Due to the
exploratory nature of the study, several limitations should be noted. First,
the qualitative nature of the method used to identify emotions hinders a
generalization of the results. Even though inter-rater reliability was statistically calculated and considered adequate, a subjective bias in the analysis
of the data remains. Another limitation refers to the size of the sample,
especially in the case of the comments, which impose a prudent discussion of the results. Future research with bigger samples of comments will
have to establish if these results are generalizable. Finally, future research
will also have to study the presence of emotions in political discourse in
non-electoral periods. Comparative studies could also analyze the emotional dimension of multiple parties’ discourse. Moreover, the deliberative
dimension of online political discussions could also be considered in more
detail, through a more extensive analysis of followers’ interactions and
participation.
Índex
79
80
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
REfEREnCES
ANDUIZA, E., CANTIJOCH, M., GALLEGO, A. AND SALCEDO, J. (2010): Internet y participación política en España, Madrid, Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas. [http://libreria.cis.es/static/pdf/OyA63a.pdf]
BAZZANELLA, C. (2004): «Emotions, Language, and Context» in WEIGAND, E. (ed.).
(2004): Emotion in Dialogic Interaction: Advances in the Complex, John
Benjamins, pp. 59-78. [doi 10.1177/0267323106066638]
BELLI, S. and DÍEZ, R. (2013): «Una aproximación al papel de las emociones en
la nueva ola de indignación global: la ocupación de espacios físicos y nofísicos», paper presented at the #15Mp2p meeting, Barcelona, IN3.
BENTIVEGNA, S. (2006): «Rethinking Politics in the World of ICT», European Journal of Communication, 21, 3, pp. 331-343.
BIMBER, B. and DAVIS, R. (2003): Campaigning Online: The Internet in U.S. Elections, New York, Oxford University Press.
CAFFI, C. and JANNEY, R.W. (1994): «Toward a pragmatic of emotive communication», Journal of Pragmatics, 22, pp. 325-373.
CAMAJ, L., HONG, S. C., LANOSGA, G. and LUO,Y. (2009): «Political Discourse on Facebook: A New Public Sphere? », Annual meeting of the Association for
Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Sheraton Boston,
Boston, MA, Aug 05, 2009. [http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p375074_
index.html]
CASTELLS, M. (2009): Comunicación y poder, Madrid, Alianza Editorial.
CHADWICK,A. (2006): Internet Politics, States, Citizens and New Communication Technologies, New York, Oxford University Press.
COLLINS, R. (2001): « Social Movements and the Focus of Emotional Attention »
in GOODWIN, J., JASPER, J.M. and POLLETTA, F. (eds.) (2001): Passionate Politics:
Emotions and Social Movements, Chicago, University of Chicago Press,
pp. 27-44.
DADER, J. L. (2001): «La ciberdemocracia posible: reflexión prospectiva a
partir de la experiencia en España », Cuadernos de Información y Comunicación (CIC), 6, pp. 177-220. [http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.
oa?id=93500609]
— (2003): « Ciberdemocracia y comunicación política virtual: el futuro de la
ciudadanía electrónica tras la era de la televisión » in BERROCAL, S. (comp.).
(2003): Comunicación política en televisión y nuevos medios, Barcelona, Ariel, pp. 309-342.
— (2009). Ciberpolítica en los websites de partidos políticos. La experiencia
de las elecciones de 2008 en España ante las tendencias transnacionales.
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
Revista de Sociología Política, 17(34), 45-62. [http://www.scielo.br/pdf/
rsocp/v17n34/a05v17n34.pdf]
DADER, J. L., CAMPOS, E.,VIZCAÍNO-LAORGA, R., and CHENG, L. (2011): «Las web de los
partidos españoles durante la campaña para las elecciones generales de
2008: pautas de cibermarketing con pocos signos de ciberdemocracia » in
SAMPEDRO,V. (ed.) (2011): Cibercampaña. Cauces y diques para la participación. Las elecciones generales de 2008 y su proyección tecnopolítica,
Madrid, Editorial Complutense, pp. 145-194.
DAHLGREN, P. (2000): «L’espace publique et l’Internet: Structure, espace et communication », Réseaux, 18, 100, pp. 157-186.
— (2005): «The Internet, Public Spheres, and Political Communication: Dispersion and Deliberation », Political Communication, 22, 2, pp. 147-162.
[doi: 10.1080/10584600590933160]
DAVIS, R. (2001): «Tecnologías de la comunicación y democracia: el factor Internet », Cuadernos de Información y Comunicación (CIC), 6, pp. 9-32.
[http://www.redalyc.org/pdf/935/93500602.pdf]
DRUCKMAN, J., KIFER, M. and PARKIN, M. (2010): «Timeless Strategy Meets
New Medium. Going Negative on Congressional Campaign Web
Sites, 2002–2006 », Political Communication, 27, pp. 88-103. [doi:
10.1080/10584600903502607]
ERREJÓN, I. (2012): La lucha por la hegemonía durante el primer gobierno
del MAS en Bolivia (2006-2009): un análisis discursivo, unpublished
doctoral dissertation, Madrid, Universidad Complutense de Madrid [http://
eprints.ucm.es/14574/1/T33089.pdf]
FREELON, D. G. (2010): «Analyzing online political discussion using three models of democratic communication », New Media and Society, 12, 7, pp.
1172-1190. [doi: 10.1177/1461444809357927]
GIBSON, R. and RÖMMELE, A. (2007): «Political Communication » in CARAMANI,
D. (ed.) (2007): Comparative Politics, Oxford, Oxford University Press,
pp. 1-59.
GOODWIN, J., JASPER, J.M. and POLLETTA, F. (2001): «Why Emotions Matter» in GOODWIN, J., JASPER, J.M. and POLLETTA, F. (eds.) (2001): Passionate Politics: Emotions and Social Movements, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, pp.
1-24.
GRAHAM,T. (2010): «The use of expressives in online political talk: Impeding or
facilitating the normative goals of deliberation? » in TAMBOURIS, E, MACINTOSH,
A. and GLASSEY, O. (eds.) (2010): Electronic Participation, Vol. 6229, Berlin,
Springer, pp. 26-41.
Índex
81
82
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.4 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 61-83
HOWARD, P. N. (2005): «Deep Democracy, Thin Citizenship: The Impact of Digital Media in Political Campaign Strategy», Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 597, 1, pp. 153-170.
JENKINS, H. (2008): Convergence Culture: La cultura de la convergencia de
los medios de comunicación, Barcelona, Paidós.
LAFLEN,A. and FIORENZA, B. (2012): «‘Okay, My Rant is Over’:The Language of Emotion in Computer-Mediated Communication», Computers and Compositions,
29, 4, pp. 296-308. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2012.09.005]
LÉVY, P. (2002/2004): Ciberdemocracia. Ensayo sobre Filosofía Política, Barcelona, UOC.
MAAREK, P. (2009): Marketing político y comunicación. Barcelona, Paidós
Ibérica.
MELUCCI, A. (1995): «The Process of Collective Identity » in JOHNSTONS, H. and
MONTERO, M. D. (2009): «E-mobilització i participació polítiques en les campanyes electorals de Ségolène Royal (2007) i Barack Obama (2008)», Quaderns del CAC, 33, pp. 27-34.
KLANDERMANS, B. (eds.) (1995): Social Movements and Culture, Minneapolis,
University of Minnesota Press, pp. 41–63.
NORRIS, P. (2003): «Preaching to the Converted?: Pluralism, Participation and
Party Websites », Party Politics, 9, 1, pp. 21-45.
RHEINGOLD, H. (2004): Multitudes inteligentes: la próxima revolución social,
Barcelona, Gedisa.
RUIZ, C.P., MASIP, J. L., DÍAZ-NOCI, J. and DOMINGO, D. (2010): «Conversación 2.0. y
democracia:Análisis de los comentarios de los lectores en la prensa digital
catalana», Comunicación y Sociedad, 2, pp. 7-39.
SANJUÁN, M. (2015): « Nuevas formaciones políticas crecidas en Internet y su
entrada en las Elecciones Europeas 2014: el caso de Movimiento RED,
Podemos, Recortes Cero y Partido X», Digitos, 1, pp. 71-89. [http://www.
revistadigitos.es/pdf/Digitos-1-Sanjuan.pdf]
SEY, A. and CASTELLS, M. (2006): «De la política en los medios a la política en
Red: Internet y el proceso político » in CASTELLS, M. (ed.) (2006): La sociedad red: una visión global, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, pp. 440-463.
SCHWEITZER, E. (2009): «Innovation or Normalization in E-Campaigning? A
Longitudinal Analysis of German Party Web Sites in the 2002 and 2005
National Elections », Paper prepared for presentation at the 67th Annual
Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, April 2-5, 2009,
Chicago, IL, USA.
SWANSON, D. and MANCINI, P. (1996): «Patterns of Modern Electoral Campaigning and Their Consequences » in SWANSON, D. and MANCINI, P. (eds) (1996):
Índex
AGNESE SAMPIETRO and LIDIA VALERA ORDAZ Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of Podemos
Politics, Media and Modern Democracy: An International Study of Innovations in Electoral Campaigning and Their Consequences.Westport,
Praege, pp. 247-276.
TRACY, S. J. (2013): Qualitative research methods: Collecting evidence, crafting analysis, communicating impact, Hoboken, NJ, Wiley-Blackwell.
VALERA, L. (2012): «Deliberation or Radicalized Partisan Discourse? The online
political discussion on the Facebook profiles of Spanish political candidates», Textual and Visual Media, 5, pp. 311-340. [http://www.textualvisualmedia.com/images/revistas/05/articles/Deliberation.pdf]
— (2014a): «El debate público en la blogosfera política española durante la
campaña electoral 2011: ¿Hacia un espacio público enriquecido o fragmentado?», Trípodos, 34, pp. 153-170. [http://www.tripodos.com/index.
php/Facultat_Comunicacio_Blanquerna/article/view/170]
— (2014b): Agenda building y frame promotion en la campaña electoral de 2011: La circulación del discurso entre partidos, medios y ciudadanos, unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Valencia.
[http://roderic.uv.es/bitstream/handle/10550/38908/Lidia%20Valera.%20
Tesis%20biling%C3%BCe.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y]
VALERA, L. and LÓPEZ, G. (2014): «Agenda and frames in the websites of the
People’s Party (PP) and the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) in the
2011 cyber campaign», Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, 69, pp.
41-66. [http://www.revistalatinacs.org/069/paper/1000_Valencia/03_
Valeraen.html].
VANDERGRIFF, I. (2013): «Emotive communication online: A contextual analysis of computer-mediated communication (CMC) cues», Journal of Pragmatics, 51, pp. 1-12. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2013.02.008]
WILSON, J. (1990): Politically Speaking: the pragmatic analysis of political
language, Oxford, Basil Blackwell.
Índex
83
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 85-106
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5
El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment
per l’habitatge: semblances, diferències
i confluències en temps de crisi
Squatting Movement and Housing Movement: Similarities,
Differences and Convergences in Times of Crisis
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA
INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES Y HUMANIDADES. UNIVERSIDAD AUTÓNOMA DEL ESTADO DE HIDALGO (MÉXICO)
Artículo recibido: 6 junio 2014
Solicitud de revisión: 8 febrero 2015
Artículo aceptado: 21 junio 2015
Resum
Les pràctiques d’okupació que sorgeixen a mitjans dels 80 al nostre país són considerades un moviment social per múltiples autors (Calle, 2004; Pruijt, 2004; Martínez, 2002).
L’any 2006 apareix arreu de l’Estat un nou moviment social diferenciat, el moviment per
l’habitatge. Aquest moviment organitzà joves d’arreu de l’Estat espanyol i, els anys posteriors, consolidà centenars de plataformes d’afectats per les hipoteques de totes les edats.
Les seves propostes i demandes han estat un full de ruta en l’aterratge pràctic del moviment del 15-M. L’objectiu d’aquest article és comparar aquests dos moviments urbans que
es poden entendre també com a pràctiques emancipadores i noves formes de participació
de la societat civil.
Paraules clau: joventut, okupació, habitatge, crisi, moviments socials
Abstract
The practical of squatting that arrived to our country in the 80’s is considered a social
movement by multiple authors (Calle, 2004; Pruijt, 2004; Martínez, 2002). The year 2006
appears a new and differentiated social movement, the housing movement.This movement
organized young people of all over the country, and therefore consolidated hundreds of
platforms of affected by the mortgages of different ages.Their proposals and demands have
been a rate routing coming from the 15-M movement. The aim of this article is to compare
these two urban movements that could be also understood as emancipation practices and
new shapes of participation of the civil society.
Keywords: youth, squatting, housing, crisis, social movements
Índex
86
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
IntRoDuCCIó
L’objectiu d’aquest article és comparar dos moviments socials contemporanis que han protagonitzat lluites socials importants a l’Estat espanyol entorn de temàtiques com l’accés a l’habitatge i a espais de sociabilitat comunitària. El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge presenten
similituds i sovint confluències, però són dos moviments diferents, tant en el
seu procés històric com en les seves formes organitzatives, objectius i lideratges.
En el primer apartat analitzarem les pràctiques d’okupació que s’originaren en el context europeu a la dècada dels setanta i s’instal·laren a Catalunya
i Espanya1 a la dècada dels vuitanta. Veurem com l’okupació ha esdevingut
un moviment social amb tots els ets i uts i farem un repàs als ja 30 anys
d’història de les okupacions al nostre país.
Per altra banda, l’any 2006 apareix el moviment per l’habitatge. Aquest
moviment organitzà joves d’arreu de l’Estat i, els anys posteriors, va consolidar centenars de col·lectius locals per l’habitatge. En els darrers temps han
guanyat protagonisme les Plataformes d’Afectats per les Hipoteques (les PAH).
Les seves propostes i demandes han estat un full de ruta en l’aterratge pràctic del moviment 15-M, amb propostes com la dació en pagament, desnonaments zero o la desaparició del parc de pisos buits. En el segon apartat explicarem la gènesi del moviment per l’habitatge i el sorgiment de les PAH.
En el tercer apartat compararem aquests dos moviments urbans, situantlos en un context més ampli de lluites contra la globalització neoliberal.
S’analitzaran les semblances i diferències entre ambdós moviments en termes d’identitat, relació amb les institucions, estratègies, objectius, organització, concepció de l’okupació i composició social dels seus activistes.
A les conclusions reflexionarem sobre les semblances, diferències i confluències entre okupació i moviment per l’habitatge, essent conscients que
caldran nous estudis empírics per validar o falsar les hipòtesis comparatives
que es plantegen.
1
L'article analitza els casos de Catalunya, Madrid i el País Basc, ja que aquests han estat estudiats per
l'autor en la seva tesi doctoral (González, 2011) i en posteriors recerques. En concret, l'article s'emmarca dins la recerca "El movimiento de okupación de viviendas y centros sociales en España y en
Europa: contextos, ciclos, identidades e institucionalización", que es portà a terme entre gener de
2012 i desembre de 2014.
Índex
87
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
1. El movImEnt PER l’okuPACIó A CAtAlunyA I A l’EStAt
ESPAnyol: CARACtERÍStIQuES I RESum hIStÒRIC
1.1. les pràctiques d’okupació com a moviment social
L’okupació d’immobles abandonats per a construir centres socials o habitatges s’adapta a les idees fonamentals per a definir un moviment social
present a la literatura acadèmica: conflicte, desafiament, canvi i acció collectiva (Pastor, 2002). A més a més, les pràctiques d’okupació han transcendit
el camp de la protesta, per acabar desembocant en una sèrie de discursos,
repertoris d’acció i formes organitzatives, que les doten d’una identitat cultural compartida fortament emparentada amb el sorgiment dels nous moviments socials a Europa (feminisme, pacifisme, ecologisme, autonomia obrera,
etc.) (Calle, 2004).
Ara bé, què és okupar? Pel sociòleg holandès Hans Pruijt okupar és viure
en (o usar d’una altra manera) immobles sense el consentiment del seu propietari (Pruijt, 2004). Podríem afegir –tal i com apunta Martínez– que es
tracta d’un moviment que se centra en l’accés directe a un bé urbà escàs
(l’habitatge i els espais de sociabilitat) i la seva legítima defensa (Martínez,
2004). De tota manera, existeixen i conviuen diverses pràctiques d’okupació.
Per sentit comú, podríem distingir aquelles que es dediquen a satisfer una
necessitat d’habitatge de les que es converteixen en Centres Socials Okupats
(CSO) on realitzar tot tipus d’activitats contraculturals en un espai públic no
estatal –fora de les lògiques burocratitzades (de l’Estat) o mercantilitzades
(del sector privat).
Hans Pruijt distingeix fins a cinc configuracions2 de l’okupació (2004:
37-60), que ens dóna idea de l’extraordinària diversitat del fenomen: a)
l’okupació basada en la pobresa que implica la participació de persones
sense recursos econòmics que realitzen okupacions a causa d’una situació
extrema de privació d’habitatge; b) l’okupació com a estratègia alternativa
d’habitatge, que inclou una varietat de situacions personals i tipus diferents
d’okupes; c) l’okupació emprenedora, que permet fer activitats econòmiques i laborals autogestionades en els centres socials; d) l’okupació conservacionista , que esdevé una tàctica usada en la preservació del paisatge rural
2
Les configuracions són una mena de models o combinacions de característiques que juntes encaixen
bé (Mintzberg, 1983, citat a Pruijt, 2004: 37). En el cas de l’okupació, les configuracions difereixen en
les característiques de les persones implicades, el tipus d’immobles, els marcs cognitius, les seves
demandes i els patrons d’organització i mobilització que desenvolupen.
Índex
88
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
i urbà, i e) l’okupació política, aquella en la qual s’identifiquen els activistes
antisistema (ja siguin revolucionaris o autònoms).
El context social que facilita l’aparició d’okupacions és el producte dels
processos de desestructuració de les xarxes socials que genera la globalització neoliberal, en forma d’una precarietat vital i d’uns riscos d’exclusió social creixents entre la població. Les dificultats per accedir a un habitatge i la
precarietat laboral s’han generalitzat en les darreres dècades, acarnissant-se
especialment en el sector juvenil i convivint amb paradoxes com l’existència d’una enorme quantitat d’habitatges buits fruit de l’especulació immobiliària.
D’altra banda, l’oferta de cultura i oci del món privat es torna cada cop
més alienant, amb la profusió de grans superfícies, macrodiscoteques i multicines, que fomenten el consum a discreció. A més de les “prestacions” logístiques, els CSO compleixen una tasca de rearticulació de les xarxes socials
locals, destrossades pel procés de globalització neoliberal. Les xarxes informals que s’estableixen en les okupacions i els desallotjaments són percebudes pels i les okupes com una recuperació positiva de sobirania sociovital
(Calle, 2004).
En paraules de Martínez, en okupar, no només se sostrauen immobles
abandonats de les lògiques especulatives-capitalistes, sinó que es genera el
principal recurs per portar a terme l’autogestió col·lectiva i per reprendre
les relacions socials i les formes de vida que reptin directament les imposicions del mercat i de la legalitat i les institucions al seu servei (Martínez,
2010). Quant a les característiques físiques del territori urbà on es produeixen les okupacions, Martínez apunta que, com a tendència general, les okupacions a l’Estat espanyol se solen localitzar en tres llocs: 1) als centres històrics i urbans (Lavapiés i Tetuán a Madrid; Raval, Ciutat Vella, Gràcia o Sants
a Barcelona); 2) en àrees de reconversió industrial i fàbriques o instal·lacions
deslocalitzades (Baix Llobregat i Vallès Occidental a Barcelona o el marge
esquerre a Bilbao), i 3) en zones de renovació urbana amb “grans projectes”
terciaris o residencials (Poble Nou a Barcelona o El Cabanyal a València).
A aquestes tres ubicacions preferencials, cal afegir l’okupació en zones periurbanes (com Collserola a Barcelona o Leioa a Biscaia), propietats abandonades per l’Estat (la Kasa de la Muntanya a Gràcia) o l’Església (com l’Escola
de la Prosperitat a Madrid o el Gaztetxe de Santutxu a Bilbao) i edificis d’habitatges sense llicències (El Puntal i Esperanza 8, al barri de Lavapiés de
Madrid) (Martínez, 2004: 84).
En definitiva, l’okupació a l’Estat espanyol tindria una condició ambivalent. És a dir, d’una banda, l’okupació es pot entendre com una arma de
Índex
89
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
combat per a portar a terme un projecte transformador. Un altra visió correspondria a l’okupació com a mitjà per a engegar projectes d’experimentació
personal i col·lectiva, seguint pautes de comportament alternatives, sota una
lògica d’insubmissió quotidiana. Es considera, doncs, que les okupacions són,
d’una banda, fi en si mateixes, espais recuperats a un sistema de propietat
basat en l’especulació i en el predomini del valor de canvi sobre el valor d’ús;
però, al mateix temps, són un mitjà per a portar a terme una lluita global
contra el sistema.
Podem dividir la història del moviment per l’okupació en tres etapes.
Per decidir on comencen i on acaben les etapes partim de les teories de cicles (Tarrow, 1997) i dels canvis en les estructures d’oportunitat política3 del
moviment per l'okupació. En la darrera etapa coincidirà i en alguns casos
confluirà (i estarà en la gènesi) amb el moviment per l'habitatge.
1.2. naixement i consolidació (1984-1995)
A Catalunya la primera okupació es produí al barri de Gràcia de Barcelona
el desembre de 1984. D'altres destacades d’aquesta primera etapa foren
l’Ateneu de Cornellà (que durà de 1986 a 2003) i la Kasa de la Muntanya,
també a Gràcia i okupada des de 1989 (continua activa). A Madrid, una incipient Assemblea d’Okupes va protagonitzar la històrica okupació de Minuesa el 1987. Pel que fa a Euskadi, el naixement del moviment per l’okupació
es produí al voltant dels moviments juvenils dels anys vuitanta. Van començar a aparèixer Gaztetxes (cases dels joves) per tot Euskal Herria. Les més
emblemàtiques foren les okupacions de la Borsa de Bilbao, la del Gaztetxe
de Gazteiz (Vitòria), així com l’Euskal Jai de Pamplona-Iruñea.
A partir de 1992 es va produir una obertura del moviment, derivada de la
incidència del moviment estudiantil, antimilitarista i feminista, entre d’altres
(González, Blas i Pelàez, 2002; Herreros, 2004). L’any 1992 semblava articularse la primera resposta al context de reestructuració capitalista de les grans
ciutats, expressada a través de tres esdeveniments: a) els Jocs Olímpics de
Barcelona, b) l’Exposició Universal de Sevilla, i c) la Capitalitat Cultural de Madrid (Martínez, 2004).
3
Sobre el concepte d'estructura d'oportunitats polítiques, veure Kitschelt (1996) i Mc Adam (1998).
Índex
90
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
1.3. Etapa daurada (1996-2000)
La criminalització de l’okupació en el nou Codi Penal (1996) va marcar
l’inici d’una expansió de les okupacions. L’estratègia de repressió del moviment per part de les institucions suposà paradoxalment la seva revitalització.
D’altra banda cal sumar el salt a l’arena mediàtica del moviment amb els
desallotjaments del Princesa a Barcelona o de la Guindalera a Madrid. A Catalunya les okupacions passaren de 40 a 150 en dos anys. A ambdós territoris
el moviment okupa esdevingué el referent dels moviments socials juvenils
radicals i protagonitzà manifestacions, resistències a desallotjaments i un
gran nombre d’okupacions. El CSO Can Vies, al barri de Sants de Barcelona,
okupat el 1997, simbolitza perfectament aquest període de puixança del
moviment.4
Cap als anys 1999 i 2000, el moviment començava a reflectir certs símptomes de canvi. D’una banda, els espais de coordinació i organització interna es
van anar perdent per a afirmar les identitats particulars de cada casa okupada.
D’altra banda, l’estratègia repressiva de l’Estat va provocar una conjuntura de
conflicte permanent amb la policia que va arribar al seu punt àlgid el 2001
amb les detencions d’algunes persones relacionades amb la protesta okupa,
acusades de pertànyer a ETA a Barcelona o als GRAPO a Madrid (Asens, 2004).
1.4. Perspectives del moviment per l’okupació contemporani (2001-2015)
Són diverses les aportacions que apunten cap a l’inici d’un nou cicle en
el moviment de les okupacions a partir de l’any 2001 (Martínez, 2007; Herreros, 2004; Miró, 2001). Els canvis operats en les estructures d’oportunitat
política del moviment van estar provocats, entre d’altres elements, per l’inici
el 1999 (Seattle) d’un nou cicle de protesta a escala internacional, que es
manifestà a l’Estat espanyol en la primera dècada del 2000.
En aquest període el moviment s’hibridà amb d’altres. En primer lloc, es
produïren confluències amb el moviment global, tant en les campanyes puntuals com en alguns centres socials okupats com Can Masdeu a Barcelona o
el Laboratorio a Madrid. En segon lloc, la confluència amb sectors del moviment veïnal en el que s’anomenà “la crítica pràctica a l’urbanisme capitalista”
4
El seu desallotjament el 26 de maig de 2014 desfermà una onada de protestes arreu de Catalunya que
mostren l'arrelament social i polític d'un centre social per on passaren fins a tres generacions diferents de joves okupes. La seva pervivència li permeté participar i relacionar-se fortament amb diversos cicles de mobilització, com el de les lluites contra la globalització neoliberal (2000-2004) o el del
15-M de 2011.
Índex
91
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
(Miró, 2001: 3). I tercer: el sorgiment els anys 2004 i 2005 de nous espais de
lluita sobre la temàtica capital-treball, a l’entorn de les deslocalitzacions
d’empreses i la precarietat laboral creixent.
En aquesta tercera etapa la pràctica de l’okupació s’estén i desborda el
camp clàssic de l’okupació. Així, des d’altres subjectivitats i identitats diferents a l’okupa, es recorre a l’okupació com una eina potent de lluita. Okupacions com la de la Rimaia –protagonitzada pel moviment estudiantil contra Bolonya–, el CSO Barrilonia –per part del moviment d’immigrants– o les
okupacions d’horts urbans –per part de coalicions heterodoxes d’activistes
de la permacultura i l’agroecología– en són exemples a Barcelona. Al mateix
temps, a Madrid, l’aparició de noves subjectivitats okupes com el Patio Maravillas o La Eskalera Karakola, confirmen aquesta tendència. En el cas català,
a més, cal afegir l’aposta de l’independentisme revolucionari per l’okupació,
que es tradueix –durant la dècada dels 2000– en les nombroses okupacions
de les assemblees de joves de l’esquerra independentista arreu del territori.
Finalment, com veurem en l’apartat següent, diferents nuclis del moviment
per l’habitatge (especialment de les PAH), del 15-M, del cooperativisme i del
propi moviment per l’okupació, okupen edificis d’habitatges per a persones
afectades per l’onada massiva de desnonaments entre els anys 2011 i 2013.
De fet, alguns autors (Martínez i García, 2013) apunten cap a l’inici d’una
quarta etapa en la història del moviment l’any 2011.
2. El movImEnt PER l’hAbItAtgE. PInzEllADES SobRE unA
hIStÒRIA RECEnt
Aquest apartat analitza els contextos i l’evolució del moviment per l’habitatge a l’Estat espanyol, centrant-se en l’observació directa, l’anàlisi dels
documents generats pel propi moviment i entrevistes semiestructurades i
en profunditat a diferents activistes de les Plataformes d’Afectats per la
Hipoteca (PAH) realitzades entre novembre de 2013 i abril de 2014 a Catalunya.
2.1. Contextos socials d’aparició d’un nou moviment
La problemàtica concreta de l’habitatge al nostre país i el context actual
de crisi econòmica són els principals contextos de sorgiment del moviment
per l’habitatge. La crisi ha produït un lleu retard en la ja de per sí elevada
Índex
92
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
edat d’emancipació dels joves catalans i espanyols. L’elevat preu del lloguer
i de la compra d’habitatge és un dels motius d’aquest retard, que situa en uns
29 anys l’edat mitjana d’emancipació dels joves espanyols, enfront dels 23
anys de Finlàndia, per exemple. De fet, el percentatge de joves emancipats
de 16 a 34 anys ha passat del 44,8 % el 2007 al 44,1 % el 2011 (Moreno et
alt., 2012: 180).
El preu mig de la compra i el lloguer han estat durant molts anys elevadíssims i ho continuen estant en l’actualitat malgrat que els darrers quatre
anys estan experimentant baixades notables5.A Barcelona, per exemple, l’any
2005 l’esforç econòmic per a comprar un pis era de 1475 euros al mes i per
llogar-lo de 735, la qual cosa suposava el 45,1 % dels ingressos d’una llar
mitjana, molt per sobre del màxim del 30 % recomanat per Nacions Unides
(Trilla i López, 2007: 752).
L’enorme parc de pisos buits, fruit de l’especulació immobiliària, no ha fet
més que créixer. Així, si al cens de l’INE de 2001 se’n comptabilitzaven uns
3,1 milions, el darrer cens de 2011 podria situar la xifra en 6 milions.6 Aquestes xifres es deuen també al model de creixement espanyol, basat fortament
en la construcció, que l'any 2007 arribà a representar el 9,3 % del PIB (més
del doble que als Estats Units) (Romero, 2010: 18).
La temporalitat dels contractes laborals i les taxes d’atur altíssimes (de
més del 25 % i de més del 40 % en el cas dels joves) formen part també
d’aquest context que dificulta l’accés a l’habitatge a milions de persones.
La conversió de l’habitatge en una pura mercaderia i en objecte de l’especulació ha estat fonamental en el model de creixement econòmic espanyol,
creant greus desequilibris socials, humans i mediambientals.
Paral·lelament, a la ciutat de Barcelona s’executaven 30 desnonaments
diaris l’any 2009, segons la Plataforma per un Habitatge Digne (El Debat.cat,
11 de febrer de 2009).
En el total de l’Estat espanyol 500 persones perdien la casa diàriament des
de 2008, segons dades de les PAH (El País, 3 de juny de 2010). La crisi de les
hipoteques ha disparat els desnonaments –uns 400.00 des que va començar
la crisi el 2008– l’endeutament de per vida de milers de persones i l’augment
del nombre de suïcidis amb aquest motiu com a causa directa (Colau i Ale5
6
Aquest fet va posar les famílies en una espiral de deute molt important, que no té en compte que amb
els preus actuals l’esforç econòmic s’ha reduït al 30 % i una mitjana de dos salaris anuals a Catalunya
(http://www.niu.cat/ca/noticies-niu-cat/minim-historic-lesforc-familiar-per-adquiriri-habitatge).
Vegeu: http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2011/08/22/suvivienda/1314001038.html, http://economia.
elpais.com/economia/2012/01/05/actualidad/1325752378_850215.html i http://www.eleconomista.es/vivienda/noticias/3653831/01/12/En-Espana-podria-haber-hasta-seis-millones-de-pisos-vacios.
html. Consultades el 31 de març de 2013.
Índex
93
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
many, 2012: 32). Al mateix temps, la insuficiència de les polítiques d’habitatge
que prioritzen els interessos de propietaris i mercat sobre el dret a l’habitatge (tot i que aquest està recollit fins i tot a la CE, art. 47) s’han fet evidents en
els darrers anys.
La desconfiança en els partits polítics, l’increment de la desafecció, la corrupció, les promeses incomplertes i, –en definitiva– la configuració de l’anomenada democràcia sense alternativa pròpia dels països perifèrics de la Unió
Europea en l’actual context de crisi i polítiques d’austeritat, completen el
context de sorgiment del moviment per l’habitatge que a través d’organitzacions de caire assembleari i d’acció directa com la PAH canalitza les demandes
i les necessitats de milers de persones afectades i solidàries (Alonso, 2014;
Colau i Alemany, 2013).
2.2. breu història: de “v de vivienda” a la pah
Cap moviment social sorgeix un dia concret, però en el cas d’aquesta
nova onada del moviment per l’habitatge, sí que hi podríem posar una data
fundacional o un mite originari. Aquest moviment va experimentar un sorgiment espontani i sorpresa arran d’una convocatòria anònima per la xarxa el
14 de maig de 2006. La convocatòria tenia però un bon referent polític, les
lluites juvenils a França contra el Primer Contracte. De fet, de forma irònica
comparava aquestes amb les mobilitzacions en favor del “botellot” que per
aquells dies es produïen en diverses ciutats d’Espanya. La convocatòria d’“assegudes” a diverses places de les principals ciutats aquell dia de maig de
2006 fou tot un èxit i desembocà en manifestacions i assemblees espontànies. En totes elles es podia apreciar la presència d’un petit nucli activista,
provinent del moviment okupa, el moviment veïnal i l’esquerra anticapitalista, rodejat d’un nombrós grup de gent “nova”, afectada directament pel problema de l’habitatge. Els activistes aportaren eines per potenciar les mobilitzacions (el saber fer) però els nous contingents “militants” aportaren frescor
i això es feia evident en les consignes i les formes de mobilització. Per exemple una de les consignes o lemes més famosos fou: No tendrás una casa en
la puta vida, mostra de la sensació d’impotència i de ràbia d’àmplies masses
populars despolititzades fins aleshores. Aquests elements es reproduiran
amplificats en el moviment dels indignats el 15 de maig de 2011.
Les vinculacions amb el moviment okupa en aquest primer període es fan
evidents a través de l’Espai Social Magdalenes a Barcelona o el Patio Maravillas a Madrid. Tots dos centres socials okupats coincideixen en presentar-se
Índex
94
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
com a partidaris de la negociació amb les administracions i en generar –per
aquest motiu– gran controvèrsia a l’interior d’un moviment okupa, posicionat majoritàriament en contra.
L’Espai Social Magdalenes es definia com:
Un projecte ubicat a Ciutat Vella que té per objectiu fomentar l’autogestió, així com promoure i allotjar iniciatives que garanteixin l’exercici i la defensa d’aquells drets que no es
troben actualment garantits en les polítiques vigents: dret a l’habitatge, dret a la ciutat, dret
a la llibertat de moviments de les persones immigrants, dret a la participació política i dret
al lliure accés i producció de cultura.7
Situat al carrer Magadalenes 13-15, es tractava d’un edifici sencer, amb
habitatges i centre social, que fou okupat el maig de 2005.8 Des del principi,
comptà amb el suport dels veïns «legals», víctimes de l’assetjament immobiliari i de les intencions de construir un hotel en aquell local. El seu bon ús
d’estratègies d’emmarcament positives davant els mitjans de comunicació i
la seva disposició explícita a la negociació,9 l’enfrontaren a part del moviment okupa, però al mateix temps facilitaren la seva continuïtat malgrat
trobar-se en ple centre de Barcelona. El primer intent de desallotjament, el
15 de febrer de 2010, fou frustrat gràcies a la concentració de centenars de
veïns. L’1 d’abril de 2010, però, s’acabà executant el desallotjament posant fi
a un procés de diàleg que les administracions no atengueren.
L’Espai Social Magdalenes esdevingué un projecte públic obert als moviments socials i al teixit associatiu del barri. Aquest espai ha generat xarxes i
iniciatives culturals i polítiques des de les quals s’han articulat i s’articulen
respostes i solucions a les problemàtiques i reptes socials que experimenta
actualment el centre històric de Barcelona: la creixent gentrificació, l’assetjament immobiliari, la pressió turistificadora, l’èxode poblacional i d’activitats, i el debilitament de les xarxes socials existents i d’acollida de població
nouvinguda.
Durant cinc anys l’ES Magadalenes fou un espai de trobada d’associacions
veïnals, moviments en defensa del dret a l’habitatge (V de Vivienda, Taller
contra la Violència Immobiliària i Urbanística), moviments en defensa dels
drets de les persones immigrants, així com d’iniciatives que promouen l’ús
7
8
9
Vegeu http://magdalenes.net/?q=ca/taxonomy/term/48.
Dins la història del moviment les successives okupacions de Miles de Viviendas des de 2003 (dos dies
al Turó de la Peira, uns mesos al carrer Sardenya i quatre anys a la Barceloneta) ja marcaven aquesta
tendència mitjançant la qual okupes activistes troben cases en un context d’alts preus del lloguer i
fomenten l'okupació d'habitatges per gent amb necessitat.
Sobre estratègies d'emmarcament i oportunitats polítiques dels moviments socials, vegeu Máiz
(1996).
Índex
95
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
del programari lliure i aposten per un accés no restrictiu a la producció i
distribució cultural. Finalment, cal destacar que l’ES Magdalenes no va ser una
iniciativa aïllada d’aquesta transició de moviment per l’okupació a moviment
per l’habitatge, sinó que s’emmarcà dins l’anomenada PHRP (Promoció d’Habitatge Realment Públic). La PHRP mantenia a inicis de 2008 quatre okupacions d’habitatges amb aquest nou enfocament al districte de Ciutat Vella. A
més de l’ES Magdalenes estaven okupats Avinyó 33, Amargós 6 i Tallers 44.
Amb plantejaments molt similars als de l’ES Magdalenes, s’okupà el 2007
al barri de Malasaña de Madrid, l’Espacio Polivalente Autogestionado Patio
Maravillas. El Patio Maravillas esdevingué un espai central dels moviments
socials madrilenys, gràcies a la seva identitat oberta i la seva arquitectura. El
primer Patio se situà en un col·legi abandonat amb un gran pati al mig. La
filosofia del Patio Maravillas fou la de defugir l’estereotip okupa i presentarse com un espai de participació social i cultural obert a tots els moviments
socials, col·lectius i individus. La seva estratègia, davant el seu procés de desallotjament fou reunir el màxim de suports socials i dialogar amb l’Ajuntament de Madrid la possibilitat d’expropiació del local. En aquest projecte, el
Patio Maravillas comptà amb el suport de la Federació Regional d’Associacions de Veïns de Madrid (FRAVM) i d’Ecologistes en Acció. Malgrat aquest
suport, el Patio fou desallotjat d’aquest edifici del carrer Acuerdo a inicis de
2010. La mateixa nit del desallotjament, com a punt culminant a la manifestació de rebuig, s’okupà un altre espai al mateix barri –al carrer Pez– on continuaren les activitats d’aquest centre social (El País, 2 d’agost de 2010).
Després d’aquesta breu ressenya sobre els espais que situen les primeres
confluències o transicions entre moviment per l’okupació i moviment per
l’habitatge a Espanya, tornem a la història dels orígens del moviment per l’habitatge. La manifestació del 2 de juliol de 2006 sota la consigna de No tendrás una casa en la puta vida congregà milers de persones arreu de l’Estat.
Les convocatòries del 30 de setembre i del 23 de desembre de 2006 seguiren
en la mateixa línia. Després, una certa resposta per part de les institucions
(Llei d’Habitatge a Catalunya i ajuts al lloguer de Zapatero) empetití les convocatòries de 2007 i 2008. Però el moviment guanyà en extensió, descentralització i autoorganització. A part de V de Vivienda –nucli fundacional– sorgiren desenes de plataformes locals per l’Habitatge Digne, així com altres de
temàtiques, com les Plataformes dels Afectats per la Violència Immobiliària
(mobbing) o les PAH. També l’elaboració discursiva i les propostes concretes
guanyaren en pes i solidesa.
L’evolució de la crisi de les hipoteques, la irrupció del 15-M i el repertori
de protesta radical, solidari i democràtic, basat en aportar solucions a les
Índex
96
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
persones afectades, seran les claus de la pervivència i el creixement d’un
d’aquests col·lectius, les PAH. A Barcelona, la PAH neix el febrer de 2009 a iniciativa de V de Vivienda. L’any 2013 ja hi havia 40 nuclis de les PAH a Catalunya i uns 130 a tot l’Estat espanyol. La generació d’eines d’empoderament de
les persones afectades ha estat el secret del creixement d’aquest moviment
associatiu que refusa l’assistencialisme i aposta per l’acció col·lectiva directa
com a única sortida a la situació de les persones que estan en processos de
desnonament.
El repertori d’acció col·lectiva de les PAH combina elements de negociació
política amb les administracions i les entitats financeres, amb accions de
pressió a entitats o persones, sobretot campanyes de boicot que afecten la
imatge pública de les entitats o escraches a dirigents polítics.10
Les PAH també han utilitzat la via legal acudint als jutjats a defensar els
hipotecats. I la via legislativa, amb la presentació d’una Iniciativa Legislativa
Popular (ILP) per la dació en pagament. Aquesta ILP fou presentada amb més
d’un milió i mig d’avals populars. La seva tramitació –acceptada in extremis
per un canvi de posició dels dos grans partits polítics del Parlament espanyol– suposà per sí sola el major impacte de tipus operatiu que ha tingut un
moviment social en els darrers 20 anys. En tot cas, la ILP fou rebutjada per la
majoria absoluta del PP.
Les PAH han aturat 600 desnonaments en quatre anys, la qual cosa demostra la seva eficiència com a mecanisme de suport mutu i la seva habilitat
negociadora, que contrasta amb la posició més clarament contestatària i anticapitalista del moviment per l’okupació. La composició de les PAH és, d’altra
banda, més plural que la del moviment okupa, destacant la presència de persones immigrades i de classe popular, juntament amb persones de classe
mitja. Pel que fa a l’edat, les PAH presenten també una gran varietat, mentre
que l’entorn okupa té una majoria juvenil.
Els reptes organitzatius que presenta el moviment per l’habitatge són
enormes. Segons una de les seves portaveus més conegudes «no donem
abast per respondre a tothom» (entrevista a Ada Colau, 2013).11 A Catalunya
el moviment ha crescut de forma més homogènia i organitzada que a la
resta de l’Estat. Avui ja compta amb una trobada mensual de plataformes i
una coordinadora. Cal tenir en compte que les PAH són un moviment de
base, sense subvencions, autogenerat per persones afectades, amb mecanis-
10 L’escrache té el seu origen més recent en les pràctiques de desobediència civil no violenta activa del
moviment argentí HIJOS, per denunciar els genocides de la Dictadura que havien estat indultats pel
Govern de Menem (Gradel, 2011).
11 Disponible a http://www.vilaweb.tv/implicats-amb-ada-colau.
Índex
97
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
mes d’autoformació col·lectiva. A Barcelona hi ha diferents reunions tots
els vespres al carrer Enamorats, que s’ha quedat petit per acollir la demanda social. Accions per aturar desnonaments, per pressionar les entitats financeres i escraches formen part del seu repertori d’acció col·lectiva més
disrusptiu, i les que més l’emparenten amb les formes de fer del moviment
per l’okupació.
A les PAH, en tant que moviment que ja es pot considerar de masses (la
darrera manifestació del 16 de febrer de 2013 aplegà centenars de milers
de persones a les principals capitals de tot l’Estat), se’ls hi interpel·la molt
més que al moviment d’okupació per qüestions de regeneració democràtica i per la necessitat de vincles amb les lluites en defensa dels serveis públics. Ara bé, des de les PAH es fan anàlisis del problema de l’habitatge molt
similars als que l’okupació porta plantejant 30 anys, tot i que a diferència
d’aquest, es presenten a més de l’anàlisi, tota una sèrie de propostes possibilistes o reformistes.
Així doncs, les PAH coincideixen amb el moviment okupa en la definició
del marc d’injustícia. Espanya és el país d’Europa que més habitatges buits
té. Per a les PAH, en referència als pisos buits en mans d’entitats financeres,
caldria prioritzar-ne l’ús social sobre l’ús especulatiu. Les PAH aposten pel
lloguer social assequible, per un màxim del 30 % dels ingressos familiars. En
canvi, les entitats nacionalitzades pel Fondo de Restructuración Ordenada
Bancaria (FROB) com Bankia i Catalunya Caixa segueixen executant i acumulant pisos buits. La Sareb (Sociedad de Gestión de Activos Procedentes de la
Restructuración Bancaria) o banc dolent, també té milers de pisos, que l’Estat està oferint a inversors estrangers per reactivar el cicle especulatiu. Les
PAH demanen que aquests habitatges buits s’obrin al lloguer social. Davant de
la situació d’emergència i la manca d’accions des de les polítiques públiques,
les PAH donen suport a l’okupació d’immobles buits que pertanyen a les entitats financeres. I és aquí on l’okupació esdevé per a les PAH una acció legítima orientada a un fi, però no un fi en si mateix.
Finalment, una altra de les propostes de les PAH és la dació en pagament.
Aquesta proposta és ja una realitat en molts casos gràcies a l’acció col·lectiva
de les PAH. Ara bé, la dació en pagament negociada també provoca un desnonament voluntari a canvi de saldar el deute i aquesta població també ha de
ser atesa, per la qual cosa no és una solució ni molt menys definitiva al problema (Colau i Alemany, 2013).
Per concloure, el salt definitiu a l’arena política institucional de la generació d’activistes que han animat moviments com el 15-M, les PAH i les marees
en defensa de la sanitat i educació públiques es produí amb la generalització
Índex
98
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
de candidatures ciutadanes municipalistes el maig de 2015. A Barcelona, la
candidatura de confluència Barcelona en Comú seria encapçalada per la
ex-portaveu de la PAH Ada Colau, mentre que a Madrid, la candidatura Ahora
Madrid, portaria a les seves llistes nombrosos activistes de la PAH. El mateix
es pot dir de centenars de candidatures arreu d’Espanya.
3. okuPACIó I hAbItAtgE: SEmblAnCES I DIfERènCIES
Alguns autors han estudiat a altres països europeus les diferències teòriques i pràctiques entre ambdós moviments. Per a Pruijt (2003) caldrà distingir en tot moment entre un moviment per l’habitatge que utilitza la pràctica
de l’okupació com a tàctica, d’un moviment okupa pel qual “squatting itself
is at the centre”. Segons Katz i Mayer (1983) diverses variables estructurals
del propi moviment ens poden presentar les clares diferències entre un i
altre moviment, que poden però coincidir i col·laborar en moltes ocasions.
En primer lloc, el predomini d’una ideologia de caire autònom, que considera que la creació d’antagonismes amb el poder establert és la clau del
canvi social, serà dominant en el moviment okupa, conferint-li un caire eminentment polític. D’altra banda, l’ús de l’okupació –més enllà de satisfer necessitats materials d’habitatge– per expressar i crear contracultura, és també
un element distintiu d’un moviment okupa resistent a la cooptació. En tercer
lloc, el moviment okupa s’organitza sempre de manera informal, mentre que
el moviment per l’habitatge compta amb estructures més formalitzades i líders visibles. Finalment, en el clàssic debat de l’okupació com mitjà o com a
finalitat en si mateixa, el moviment okupa reconeix aquesta ambivalència i
situa la seva pràctica com un mitjà per dur a terme una transformació social
més àmplia, i com a finalitat en si mateixa, per la crítica frontal a la propietat
(pilar del capitalisme) i les possibilitats de crear illes d’autonomia social i
vital en els centres socials i cases okupades.
Aquesta concepció de l’okupació com a moviment ha predominat a
l’Estat espanyol en els darrers trenta anys. Ara bé, altres experiències com
la Masoveria Urbana12 o el moviment per l’habitatge podrien obrir nous
12 Acords entre el propietari i els llogaters, mitjançant els quals el llogater fa millores en l'edifici a canvi de
gaudir en períodes acordats per contracte de l'usdefruit de l'habitatge sense pagar una renda. Mataró
fou la ciutat que comptà amb les primeres experiències mitjançant la tasca de l’associació Dret a Sostre
(González, Peláez i Blas, 2002). La Llei del Dret de l'Habitatge de 2007, en el seu article 28, regulà la
Masoveria de forma legal. Malgrat això no s'han fet molt extensius els contractes de Masoveria Urbana
i es pot dir que només hi ha experiències aïllades a diverses poblacions de Catalunya, algunes d'elles
impulsades per la Cooperativa Integral Catalana (Ribugent i Solanas, 2013).
Índex
99
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
escenaris a la negociació. Caldrà veure, però, si es resolen en institucionalització o cooptació, o si la dinàmica repressiva segueix sent la dominant,
com fins ara.13
Dos models ideals de moviment en defensa de l’habitatge i de moviment okupa, podrien servir per distingir les estratègies negociadores de les
de confrontació. També el tipus de relacions amb les institucions, els objectius, els models organitzatius o la pròpia concepció de l'okupació, com podem veure en el quadre següent.
Quadre 1
Diferències entre un moviment okupa i un moviment per l’habitatge
(tipus ideals)
Moviment okupa
Moviment prohabitatge
Identitat
Forta, contracultural
Difusa, integrada
Relació amb institucions
Autonomia
Interlocució
Estratègia dominant
Confrontació
Disrupció/ negociació
Objectius
Anticapitalisme
Polítiques d’habitatge
Organització
Informal
Activistes
Formalitzada
Activistes + afectats
Concepció de
l’okupació
Fi i mitjà
Mitjà per accedir a un
habitatge
Composició per edats
Predomini generació
jove
Intergeneracional
Font: Elaboració pròpia, a partir de Pruijt (2003).
En la pràctica no trobarem cap moviment que s’ajusti a aquests tipus
ideals, i de vegades trobarem situacions on un moviment prohabitatge presenta característiques similars a les d’un moviment okupa. Aquest fou el cas
de Barcelona l’any 2006, on un fort moviment per un habitatge digne apare13 Els desallotjaments l'any 2014 de blocs de pisos de Salt i de Sabadell okupats per les respectives PAH
locals, fan pensar que les administracions i els bancs segueixen tancats a la negociació, per la qual
cosa la institucionalització o la cooptació semblen encara escenaris llunyans.
Índex
100
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
gué sense estructures formalitzades, ni estratègies que facilitessin l’establiment d’àmplies aliances socials, la qual cosa, per alguns autors, l’abocà al
fracàs (Aguilar y Fernández, 2010: 679).
En tot cas, les oportunitats polítiques que obria el Pacte Nacional de l’Habitatge a Catalunya o els ajuts al lloguer juvenil arreu de l’Estat coincidiren
temporalment amb el sorgiment –a Catalunya i a Madrid– d’un moviment
per un habitatge digne, diferent del moviment per l’okupació. Aquest fet
demostrà que el de les okupacions no és –ni pretén ser– un moviment exclusivament orientat cap a aquest aspecte de les polítiques públiques. El
moviment per l’habitatge va tenir una gran incidència en l’organització de
grans manifestacions de joves en favor del dret a l’habitatge a les principals
ciutats de l’Estat espanyol. Amb la crisi de 2008 el moviment s’ha estès a altres capes socials, com els afectats per les hipoteques. Aquesta qüestió posa
en evidència que el moviment per l’okupació a l’Estat espanyol no és, fonamentalment, un moviment per l’habitatge. De fet, caldria caracteritzar-lo com
un moviment on hi conviuen motivacions polítiques de ruptura amb el sistema capitalista amb estratègies alternatives de cerca d’habitatge i d’espais
de convivència.
D’altra banda, la radicalitat de les propostes okupes i el seu atac a la propietat privada han dificultat l’emmarcament del seu discurs en els marcs
mestres hegemònics. En un context de dominació simbòlica neoliberal, el
moviment per l’okupació tindrà greus dificultats per emmarcar els seus discursos. Però en canvi, el fort suport social del moviment dels indignats del
15-M o de les PAH obren un nou cicle de lluites centrat en demandes bàsiques
contra el model neoliberal de gestió de la crisi i en favor d’una democràcia
real, amb autonomia dels mercats i lliure de les corrupteles i de la indiferència de la classe política.
Al llarg d’aquests 30 anys, certs discursos del moviment per l’okupació
han penetrat en les polítiques públiques i han eixamplat el menú d’alternatives possibles. Per exemple, podem trobar aquesta circumstància en els casos en els que hi ha hagut negociació o a través de la generalització i extensió de polítiques juvenils afirmatives (relacionades amb el lleure o la
formació en el temps lliure). En tot cas, a l’Estat espanyol, les administracions
públiques han estat lluny de ser permeables a la influència de moviments
socials de caràcter autogestionari. De fet, les darreres tendències mostren un
increment de la pressió policial i judicial contra les okupacions. En concret,
el Senat espanyol va aprovar el juliol de 2010 una nova reforma del Codi
Penal que incrementà les penes per usurpació. Al mateix temps, i amb la
pretensió oficial de facilitar el lloguer en temps de crisi, el 2010 entrà en
Índex
101
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
vigor la Llei de mesures de foment i agilització del lloguer, que juntament
amb les reformes de la Llei d’Enjudiciament Civil, aprovades el desembre de
2009, pretenen accelerar els desnonaments (Manrique, 2010).
Aquesta pressió legal i policial sobre les okupacions es produeix però en
un context del seu creixement, en especial de les degudes a la pobresa. En
concret, segons dades de l’Ajuntament de Barcelona, les okupacions havien
crescut l’any 2009 en un 11,2 % per situar-se en un total de 249 a la ciutat
(Manrique, 2010). Aquestes xifres mostren que les condicions socials, econòmiques i urbanes que van fer sorgir el fenomen de les okupacions no sols no
han remés, sinó que s’han accentuat.
En aquest context, les perspectives del moviment per l’okupació es
presenten ambivalents. Per una banda, el moviment es troba en el centre
d’una espiral de criminalització; però, per l’altra, la pràctica de les okupacions s’ha estès com mai a altres moviments socials i a persones amb problemes d’accés a l’habitatge. A més a més, el creixement d’un moviment
d’ateneus, centres socials legals i noves forces polítiques emergents afins a
les okupacions, garanteixen que el moviment no quedarà aïllat. L’exemple
més clar d’estratègies coincidents entre okupació i moviment per l’habitatge són les pròpies okupacions promogudes per la PAH.14 D’altra banda, altres okupacions vinculades al 15-M desenvolupen projectes similars però
desvinculats de la PAH.
Les PAH estan tenint forts impactes polítics i protagonisme en els darrers
anys. Malgrat el seu perfil aparentment temàtic i moderat, estan aglutinant
corrents polític partidaris de la regeneració democràtica i del canvi radical
de sistema polític i econòmic. Les PAH afirmen sense embuts que cal fer fora
del poder els responsables de la crisi i processar-los, ja que mentre hi ha
impunitat no hi ha democràcia (entrevista a Ada Colau, 2013). Les PAH estan
actuant com a moviment social generador de consciència col·lectiva i han
sabut situar un marc d’injustícia15 molt clar que ha connectat amb la majoria
de la població. A partir d’aquest, les PAH han generat també un marc d’acció
col·lectiva (Benford i Snow, 1994), és a dir, una disposició individual favorable a les accions promogudes contra els desnonaments per part d’un nombre significatiu de persones.
14 L'abril de 2013 hi havia vuit edificis a Catalunya okupats per l’Obra Social la PAH, tres a Sabadell, dos
a Terrassa, un a Cerdanyola, un a Rubí i un a Girona. Les famílies pagaven un lloguer social i l’ingressaven davant notari en un compte per tal de demostrar la bona fe.
15 Sobre el concepte marc d’injustícia vegeu Gamson, Fireman i Rytina, 1982. Aquests autors defineixen
els marcs com orientacions mentals que organitzen la percepció i la interpretació dels fenòmens
socials.
Índex
102
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
La demanda de noves formes de democràcia participativa i la vinculació
a un dret de tipus materialista com l’habitatge, aterren al moviment per
l'habitatge dins l’opinió pública de forma més evident que amb el moviment per l’okupació. Les seves reivindicacions de caire “reformista” el situen
més proper als marcs simbòlics16 de la majoria dels ciutadans que no pas
el radicalisme del moviment per l’okupació. L’aparició d’una nova fornada
d’activistes urbans modernitza les vetustes formes del moviment veïnal.
Tots aquests trets situen el moviment per l'habitatge com un moviment
central en els cicles de mobilització i de lluita contra la gestió neoliberal
de la crisi financera i per tant l’apropen –des de la pròpia pràctica i de
forma paradoxal (o no)– als orígens anticapitalistes del propi moviment
per l'okupació.
4. ConCluSIonS PRElImInARS
La primera conclusió quedarà com una qüestió oberta, pendent de posteriors estudis comparatius que comptin amb una major explotació de dades
empíriques. Es tracta de veure si el moviment per l’habitatge que apareix a
finals de la primera dècada del segle XXI constitueix una nova etapa de la
història de les okupacions o bé s’ha d’abordar com un moviment separat i
diferenciat del d’okupacions. En aquest article es demostra que el moviment
d’okupacions o algunes de les seves components es troben en la gènesi del
moviment per l’habitatge digne. El recorregut personal d’una de les seves
portaveus més conegudes,Ada Colau, ens en dóna les pistes: Miles de Viviendas, l’ES Magdalenes, V de Vivienda i PAH.
També ha quedat clar que les diferències entre ambdós moviments són
substantives en algunes dimensions analítiques: una identitat difusa i integrada del moviment per l’habitatge enfront d’una de contracultural més forta
en el d’okupacions; una predisposició immediata a la negociació per part del
moviment per l’habitatge i una estratègia més autònoma de les okupacions;
uns objectius concrets centrats en les polítiques d’habitatge per part del
primer i uns objectius més generals i que entronquen amb les tradicions
polítiques més transformadores per part de l’okupació; una organització un
tant més formalitzada i amb interlocutors coneguts i on també es pot distingir entre activistes i afectats, contrasten amb una organització informal, basa16 Seguint Bourdieu (1991), podem afirmar que la PAH ha consolidat una forma de veure la política molt
diferent ideològicament a la dels partits polítics convencionals. L’acció directa disruptiva en defensa
d’un interès material com l’habitatge és percebuda com a legítima per amplis sectors socials.
Índex
103
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
da en el treball diari dels activistes –tot i que no és descartable cert lideratge
carismàtic– en el món de les okupacions.
Finalment, tant moviment per l’habitatge com moviment okupa proposen
una economia social i cooperativa que torni a posar al centre les necessitats
de la població i no el fet de generar el màxim lucre. Es pot afirmar que –tot
i que amb tàctiques i identitats diferents– la finalitat darrera d’ambdós moviments coincideix en què cal transformar radicalment el sistema, i més enllà
de solucionar un problema de polítiques públiques d’habitatge, lligar la seva
solució a un canvi més global del sistema econòmic i polític realment existent.
REfERènCIES
AGUILAR, S. y A. FERNÁNDEZ (2010): «El movimiento por la vivienda digna en España o el porqué del fracaso de una protesta con amplia base social»,
Revista Internacional de Sociología, 68, pp. 679-704.
ALONSO, S. (2014): «“Votas pero no eliges”: la democracia y la crisis de la deuda soberana en la Eurozona», Recerca, Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 15,
pp. 21-53.
ASENS, J. (2004): «La represión al movimiento de las okupaciones: del aparato
policial a los mass media» a ADELL, R. i M. MARTÍNEZ (coords.) (2004): ¿Dónde están las llaves? El movimiento okupa: prácticas y contextos sociales, Madrid, Los Libros de la Catarata, pp. 293-337.
BENFORD, R. i D. SNOW (1994): «Marcos de acción colectiva y campos de identidad en la construcción social de los movimientos», a GUSFIELD J. i E. Laraña
(eds.) (1994): Los nuevosmovimientos sociales: de la ideología a la
identidad, Madrid, CIS.
BOURDIEU, P., (1991): La distinción, Madrid, Taurus.
CALLE, Á. (2004): «Okupaciones: un movimiento contra las desigualdades materiales y expresivas», a TEZANOS F. (2004): Tendencias en desigualdad y
exclusión, Madrid, Sistema, pp. 270-305
CASTILLO, E. i R. GONZÁLEZ (1997): Com i perquè d’aquestes almorranes kabrejades. Anàlisi d’un moviment de protesta política. El moviment per
l’okupació a Catalunya, treball d’investigació, UAB, inèdit.
COLAU, A. i A. ALEMANY (2012): Vidas hipotecadas. De la burbuja immobialiria al derecho a la vivienda, Barcelona, Cuadrilátero de libros.
— (2013): ¡Si se puede! Crónica de una pequeña gran victoria, Barcelona,
Destino.
Índex
104
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
GONZÁLEZ, R., A. BLAS i L. PELÀEZ (2002): «Okupar, resistir y generar autonomía.
Los impactos políticos del movimiento por la okupación» a IBARRA, P., S.
MARTÍ i R. GOMÀ (coords.) (2002): Creadores de democracia radical. Movimientos sociales y redes de políticas públicas, Barcelona, Icaria,
pp. 187-218.
GONZÁLEZ, R. (2011): Xarxes Crítiques i Polítiques Públiques: els impactes
del moviment per l’okupació a Catalunya i Madrid (1984-2009), UAB,
tesi doctoral.
GRADEL, S. (2011): «Política, memoria y justícia. Los “escraches” como acción
política de resistència», Revista Electrónica del Instituto de Investigaciones Ambrosio L. Gioja, año V, número especial, pp. 289-298.
GAMSON, W., B. FIREMAN i S. RYTINA (1982): Encounters with Unjust Authority.
Chicago, Dorsey Press.
GOFMAN, E. (1974): Frame analysis. An Essay on the Organization of Experience, Boston, Northeastern University Press.
HERREROS,T. (2004): «Moviments socials i cicles de protesta: el cicle de protesta del capitalisme global, 1994-2003», ponència al VIII Congreso Español
de Sociología, Alacant, FES.
KATZ, S. i M. MAYER (1983): «Gimme Shelter: Self-help Housing Struggles within
and against the State in New York City and West Berlin», International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 9 (1), pp. 15-45.
KITSCHELT, H. (1996): «Political oportunity structures and political protest :
anti-nuclear movements in four democracies», British Journal of Political
Science, 16, pp. 55-85.
MÁIZ, R. (1996): «Nación de Breogán: oportunidades políticas y estrategias
enmarcadoras en el movimiento nacionalista gallego (1886-1986)», Revista de Estudios Políticos, 92, pp. 33-75.
MANRIQUE, P. (2010): «Medidas penales contra las okupaciones», Diagonal, del
8 al 21 de juliol de 2010, pp. 22-23.
MARTÍNEZ, M. (2002): Okupaciones de viviendas y centros sociales. Autogestión, contracultura y conflictos urbanos, Barcelona, Virus.
— (2004): «Del urbanismo a la autogestión: una historia posible del movimiento de okupación en España» a ADELL, R. i M. MARTÍNEZ (coords.) (2004):
¿Dónde están las llaves? El movimiento okupa: prácticas y contextos
sociales, Madrid, Los Libros de la Catarata, pp. 61-88.
— (2007): «El movimiento de okupaciones: contracultura urbana y dinámicas
alter-globalización», a PRIETO, R. (coord.) (2007): «Jóvenes, globalización y
movimientos altermundistas», Revista de Estudios de Juventud, 76,
pp. 225-243.
Índex
105
ROBERT GONZÁLEZ GARCÍA El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge
— (2010): «El movimiento de okupaciones: una larga e inquietante existencia», Viento Sur, 108, pp. 43-48.
MARTÍNEZ, M. i Á. GARCÍA (2013): «A convergence of antineoliberalism movements in Spain: Squatting, Housing and M15 movements» a http://www.
miguelangelmar tinez.net/ IMG/pdf/Athens_2013_housing_
squatting_15M_v3.pdf, consultat el 2 de juny de 2014.
MCADAM, D. (1998): «Orígenes conceptuales, problemas actuales y direcciones futuras», a IBARRA, P. i B. TEJERINA (eds.) (1998): Los movimientos sociales. Transformaciones políticas y cambio cultural, Madrid, Trotta.
MIRÓ, I. (2001): «Okupació: superant la criminalització. Impulsant de nou la
crítica práctica de l’urbanisme capitalista», Contracorrent, 5, pp. 4-5.
MORENO, A., A. LÓPEZ i S. SALGADO (coord.) (2012): La transición de los jóvenes
a la vida adulta. Crisis económica y emancipación tardía, Barcelona,
Obra Social “la Caixa”, Colección Estudios Sociales, 34.
PASTOR, J. (2002): ¿Qué son los movimientos antiglobalización?, Madrid, RBA
Libros.
PISSARELO, G. i J. ASENS (2013): «La criminalización de la PAH: cuando el que “escracha es el poder», Sin permiso, a http://www.sinpermiso.info/textos/
index.php?id=5831, consultat el 9 d’abril de 2013.
PRUIJT, H. (2003): «Is the Institutionalization of Urban Movements Inevitable?
A Comparison of the Opportunities for Sustained Squatting in New Cork
City and Amsterdam», International Journal of Urban and Regional
Research, 27, pp. 133-157.
— (2004): «Okupar en Europa», a ADELL, R. i M. MARTÍNEZ (coords.) (2004):
¿Dónde están las llaves? El movimiento okupa: prácticas y contextos
sociales, Madrid, Los Libros de la Catarata, pp. 35-60.
RIBUGENT, G. i P. SOLANAS (2013): «La masoveria del segle XXI» a http://www.vilaweb.cat/noticia/4151276/20131022/masoveria-segle-xxi.html, consultat el 5 de juny de 2014.
ROMERO, J. (2010): «Construcción residencial y gobierno del territorio en España. De la burbuja especulativa a la recesión. Causas y consecuencias»,
Cuadernos Geográficos, 47, pp. 17-46.
TARROW, S. (1997): El poder en movimiento. Los movimientos sociales, la
acción colectiva y la política, Madrid, Alianza Universidad.
TRILLA, C. i J. LÓPEZ (2007): «8.4. Vivienda» a V. NAVARRO (dir.) Informe 2007.
Observatorio social de España. El Estado del Bienestar en España y las
CC. AA. Análisis de indicadores clavehttp://www.seg-social.es/prdi00/
groups/public/documents/binario/51940.pdf, consultat el 30 de maig de
2014, pp. 745-776.
Índex
106
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.5 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 85-106
EntREvIStES
ADA COLAU, Vilaweb TV, 22 de març de 2013. Disponible a: http://www.vilaweb.tv/implicats-amb-ada-colau (consultada abril 2013).
Índex
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 107-128
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6
Democracy will never be the same again: 21st
Century Protest and the transformation of Politics
La democracia nunca volverá a ser igual: Las protestas
del siglo XXI y la transformación de la política
SIMON TORMEY
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Artículo recibido: 5 noviembre 2014
Solicitud de revisión: 30 diciembre 2014
Artículo aceptado: 14 abril 2015
Abstract
This paper looks at the current wave of protests and demonstrations and asks whether
what we are witnessing is the emergence of a new movement against austerity and in favour
of democracy, as many suggest. The wider context is the crisis of representative politics,
which is in turn transforming the nature of mobilisation, contestation and politics more generally. In place of traditional organisational structures, we are seeing the emergence of cloud,
swarm and connective initiatives with characteristics that challenge and supplant traditional
organisational politics. We are seeing the emergence of a politics that is resistant to ‘politicians’ of whatever ideology, seeking to recuperate power and agency from representatives.
This creates an interesting tension at the heart of democracy: whether and to what extent
democracy needs to ‘reboot’ or whether new political parties and movements can ally the
connective to representational styles of politics to provide a way in which democracy can
evolve.
Keywords: democracy, protest, representation, activism
Resumen
Este artículo examina la ola de protestas y manifestaciones, preguntándonos si, como
muchos sugieren, lo que estamos presenciando es el surgimiento de un nuevo movimiento
contra la austeridad y a favor de la democracia. El contexto político está marcado por una
generalizada crisis de la política representativa, hecho que a su vez marca la transformación
de la naturaleza de la movilización, de la contestación y de la política en general. Estamos
presenciando el surgimiento de iniciativas con características cloud, swarm y conectivas que
desafían y suplantan a las estructuras organizativas tradicionales. En la actualidad está emergiendo una forma de política que es resistente a los “políticos” de cualquier tipo de ideología
y que trata de recuperar el poder de los representantes. Esto crea una tensión interesante en
el corazón de la democracia: si, y en qué medida, la democracia necesita ‘resetearse’ o si los
nuevos partidos y los nuevos movimientos políticos pueden aliar lo conectivo a estilos de
Índex
108
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
representación política capaces de proporcionar una manera en la que la democracia pueda
evolucionar.
Palabras clave: democracia, protestas, representación, activismo
IntRoDuCtIon
Since 2011 and the extraordinary events of the Arab Spring we have, it
seems, entered a new phase of protest, revolt and rebellion (Castells, 2012;
Mason, 2013). There will be debates about the degree to which the date itself is significant in terms of providing a marker for developments that have
their origin in deep-lying phenomena. However, there seems to be a degree
of consensus amongst interested commentators that the events around the
Arab Spring resonated with sufficient force to provoke a ripple effect in
terms of sparking rebellions, protests and insurrections across the world.
The symbolic occupation of space associated with Tahrir Square quickly
became emblematic of a kind of citizen activism then witnessed in Spain, in
Occupy Wall Street, in the Pots and Pans Protests in Iceland, and more recently in public occupations and protests in Turkey, Bulgaria,Thailand, Brazil,
Hong Kong and many other locations besides.
It is one thing to note outbursts of citizen disaffection, but what are the
longer-term ramifications of such actions for democracy? To what degree are
these otherwise separate events tied together in ‘a movement’? Are today
actions a movement against austerity? Or are they to be read as a movement
in favour of democracy? Or are they just the latest manifestation of citizens’
disapproval of what elites do in their name? A movement implies some sort
of coalescence of ends and objectives. It implies a sharing of perspective. It
also implies some singularity as far as organisation is concerned. A movement implies some minimal unity, either of purpose or affect or goal. How
then might we think about this current phase as a movement? What would
be its common features? And assuming that we can describe these protests
on such terms, what are the implications for politics generally and democracy in particular? Where is this ‘movement’ - if such it be - taking us?
1. thE PAttERn of REvolt
Let’s consider, firstly, some of the obvious ways in which these events are
linked. Several points seem to suggest themselves:
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
1. Object: A revolt against ‘politicians’ - the aspects of these protests that
stands out is the contempt, anger and hatred expressed towards representatives or politicians (Mason, 2013). The Arab Spring had its origins in deep disaffection and mistrust of local elites across North Africa, culminating in the overthrow of the Egyptian Prime Minister. The
accusation was that elites had become corrupt and indifferent to the
needs of ordinary people. This in turn led to street protests and occupations as the logical as well as symbolic expression of people’s outrage. With ‘nowhere else to go’, the street and squares become the
setting for the expression of these frustrations. This gesture resonated
in Spain, which has similarly endured a crisis of legitimacy brought
about by corruption, cronyism and clientelism exercised by the two
main political parties. Events in Iceland were sparked by evidence of
collusion between politicians and bankers that led to the Icelandic
state going bankrupt, and with it losing the savings and pensions of
many citizens. Occupy Wall Street was a response to the incompetence and self-serving of ‘the 1%’ or elites considered in general terms
to include both bankers and politicians. In Turkey the protests were
triggered by the insensitivity of local politicians to objections to an
inappropriate development at Taksim Square. Around the world, politicians are in the firing line – as signalled not just by revolt but by the
rise of populist movements dedicated to overturning ‘bureaucracy’,
‘waste’, and the corruption of elites.
2. Context: A revolt against austerity - the global financial crisis of 2008
unleashed unprecedented cutbacks in public spending across both
the developed and developing world. It was ordinary people who paid
for the incompetence of politicians and the quasi-criminal activities of
bankers who gambled with the deposits and livelihoods of their own
often unsuspecting clients and then went running to the taxpayer as
their institutions went bust. With public finances in trouble so measures have been imposed to cut back on welfare, public services, education and benefits to the detriment of the very poorest elements of
society. The focus of much public activity in Spain for example has
been to roll back these measures. Groups such as La Plataforma de
Afectados por las Hipotecas (PAH) have sprung up to defend mortgagees against the actions of banks seeking to repossess properties
(Feenstra and Keane, 2014). In Greece an extensive network of direct
action groupings, citizens solidarity initiatives, protests and demonstrations has characterised civil society over the past decade. Across Eu-
Índex
109
110
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
rope citizens have protested and revolted against the harsh measures
imposed by governments.
3. Capacity: New weapons of the weak - one of the most commentatedupon aspects of the current phase of revolt is the role played by ICT
and social media technologies (Christensen, 2011; Morozov, 2012; Hill,
2013). There’s a high degree of consensus that Twitter and Facebook
amongst other technologies were an important factor in the spread of
protests across the Arab speaking world in 2011.The evidence is even
clearer in Spain where the initial event that precipitated the current
unrest, the occupation of squares on 15 May 2011, was created
through hashtags and callouts involving minimal organisation by existing groups or political parties (Anduiza et al., 2013; Postill, 2013;Toret,
2013). Occupy was a phenomenon that owed its extensive take up
across the world to ICT. What is becoming clearer is the degree to
which these technologies facilitate mobilisation and organisation
without the need for the infrastructure previously regarded as essential to the successful development of initiatives: leadership structures,
funding, officials and so forth. Sometimes it just takes a suggestive
hashtag or photo capturing the particular mood or anger of citizens
can resonate and create the basis for a significant mobilisation. Whether it provides the basis for something more substantial is perhaps one
of the most hotly-debated topics in social movement literatures; but it
is clear that ICT is changing the nature and potential of organisational
politics in a dramatic way.
For our purposes, it is important to bear in mind the particular kind of
politics that ICT or Twitter-led mobilisation provokes because this will give
us an insight into the particular kind of ‘movement’ that we are describing.
Assuming that it makes sense to speak about these initiatives as being part
of a movement, then it is worth thinking further about the characteristics
they display. We can summarise them in terms of their being:
• Acephelous - or ‘leaderless’. The particular aspect that unites developments since 2011 is that they were triggered by ordinary citizens or
activists who remained largely anonymous as events unfolded. Whilst
it might be possible to identify certain activists, factions or groupings
who initiate an event such as 15M, it is the event itself that becomes
the focus rather than the people who initiated it. The events took on
a life of their own and gave rise to a largely spontaneous form of poli-
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
tics focused on occupation, the creation of assemblies and other kinds
of deliberative structures.The Arab Spring, through the events in Spain
to Occupy were largely movements from below unaided and unassisted by existing organisations or leaders. This contrasts with more
traditional political initiatives usually characterised by an identifiable
leadership group. Political organisations have usually succeeded on
the ability of the leadership to articulate demands that then attract a
following to it. Event based and episodic revolts do not display classic
movement characteristics as this has usually been thought about: appointed leaders, a clear division of labour, a ‘head’ and a ‘body’ in a
relatively fixed formation.
• Non-programmatic – What also unites these actions is that they have
their origin in an immediate reaction to a particular political and economic context rather than being a product of planning or organisation
in the name of a particular ideology or programme. But of equal significance is the degree to which once created the occupations and
assemblies resisted the call to develop a programme, demands, a manifesto. This has been an immense frustration to high profile leftists
such as Slavoj Zizek,Alain Badiou and Jodi Dean who would like to see
these movements develop a set of demands around which opinion
could coalesce and which could then form the basis for a strategy to
contest power – a ‘counter-hegemonic bloc’, to deploy Gramsci. But
what seems to be the case is that the participants in these events
rightly or wrongly associated such an approach with an exclusionary
form or style of politics. This resistance to the development of a programme has not in this sense been haphazard or accidental. It has
been the result of collective deliberation amongst participants. The
view of participants at events such as 15M and Occupy has been that
the development of demands or a programme would quickly lead to
the development of a conventional political organisation or party –
which would enthuse and mobilise some, but not all. The participants
clearly wished to avoid such an outcome, and in turn avoid gestures
that split the initiative into as it were believers and non-believers, leaders and led. In this sense they enact a kind of anti-politics associated
with the perspectives of those such as Subcomandante Marcos and
John Holloway who see the function of insurgent initiatives such as
these as creating political possibility, not an end project or blueprint
(Marcos, 2001; Holloway, 2002).
Índex
111
112
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
• Non/anti-representative - In light of the above, this is a movement
that at one level resists representation or the apparatus of representative politics as that has long been thought about. None of these initiatives or events have so far given rise to a traditional movement or
political party. Some of them have come and gone leaving little in the
way of permanent memorial. In Spain for example, what we observe
is some of those identifying with 15M creating political organisations,
but of a new kind. Some of them such as Podemos and Party X reject
the traditional hierarchy of political parties with clear leaderships and
a standing bureaucracy in favour of the use of electronic Peer-2-Peer
and Twiki technologies facilitating an interchange between activists.
Other parties style themselves as protest parties, seeing their role exclusively in terms of humiliating the political class or making the case
for a ‘second transition’ to a more democratic and proportional system
of elections. None of these new political parties represent the Indignados as such. As is often stated by the parties themselves, the Indignados cannot be represented without losing what Indignados means:
the description of all those who are angry or ‘pissed off’. The parties
are better characterised as an extension of protest, an extension of ‘the
street’, or what is more the same, new tools for developing weapons
in the struggle against elites. They are seeking to keep alive the spirit
of direct and immediate participation by anyone who shares the conviction that the present misery needs to be resisted.That they take the
form of political parties is more testament to the ease with which it is
possible to create parties that are flatter, less hierarchical, or less like
traditional parties in structure. The point should be clear: in Spain and
elsewhere citizens are seeking ways of protesting, resisting, that evade
the exclusionary character of politics as this has been practised hitherto (Feenstra, 2015). They seek open, participatory and deliberative
mechanisms whether physical or virtual in which ordinary people can
recuperate some sense of voice and value rather than being spoken
for by others.
So any talk of the current phase of protest as tantamount to the emergence of a new movement has to be made with caution. None or very few
of the characteristics that we associate with social and political movements
would seem to be present in anything other than a rather superficial sense.
Indeed we might go further: these are protests and revolts that display a
unity only in relation to the unwillingness of participants to develop
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
party or movement characteristics. They self-consciously avoid leadership,
clear demands, manifestos, bureaucracy, offices, external funding. This gives
witness to the emergence of a politics that is anti- and non-representative.
Before asking ourselves where all this might be heading and what it means
for democracy, it is I think useful to link these developments to a consideration of the wider political context in which they are taking place: the crisis
of representative politics (Tormey, 2015).
2. REPRESEntAtIon – whAt’S hAPPEnIng?
The preoccupation of today’s activists with avoiding representative practices looks curious until we set in the context of what is happening elsewhere in mainstream as well as street politics. Considering the former it is
difficult to avoid concluding that we are dealing with a much more generalised phenomenon that penetrates the nature of politics more generally. Consider the following four variables:
• Thedeclineofparticipationinelections – Across the ‘advanced democracies’ we are witnessing a marked decline in engagement in electoral politics (Dalton, 2004; Hay, 2007). The long-term trend since the
1960s suggests that only presidential elections and general elections in parliamentary systems - show signs of staving-off decline. Yet even
here the 60% turnout achieved by for example US presidential elections illustrates the problem starkly. 40% of electors cannot or will not
engage in a process that takes a matter of minutes of their time. In
Europe the long-term trend is also clear: fewer citizens are voting with
the exception of moments of crisis when they perceive that there is
something important at stake, as for example in Italy in 2013. Take
‘crisis’ away, and citizens are becoming increasingly inclined to ignore
the spectacle. Elections at the supranational and subnational levels
show the nature of the problem in even greater relief. The recent European elections attracted around 30% of citizens in European countries or one citizen in three. And it was populist, protest and ‘anti-political’ parties who made the furthest advances. This of course is itself
a symptom of a failing system, not a source of hope or salvation for
representative politics (Alonso, 2014).
• Thedeclineinmembershipoftraditionalpoliticalparties - Recent
data from Europe shows the precipitous decline of membership in
Índex
113
114
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
political parties over the past half-century (Mair and Van Biezen, 2001;
Van Biezen et al., 2012). Where once the major political parties were
able to attract between 30% of the voting population, now that figure
is often below 10%, and in some cases such as the UK heading for 1 or
2%. Given that political parties play a crucial transmission role between citizens and representatives, this is bad news for those who
regard liberal democracy as the best means achieved so far to ensure
that representation engages citizens directly and immediately in their
daily lives and not just during periods of elections. However, citizens
are turning their backs on traditional political parties – particularly
traditional left parties such as PSOE, PSOK, Labour, and the SPD - and by
extension on the means by which they used to be able to have some
say in the political process. The result is that parties increasingly turn
to business in order to find the means of keeping themselves going. It
also means that they become progressively less sensitive to the needs
of their own memberships, in turn reinforcing the impression that the
leadership of political parties cares little for ordinary party activists.
Politicians are becoming ‘executive’ style figures, competing with each
other on the basis of their ability to speak directly to electors via the
media. ‘Style over substance’ has become the watchword for today’s
politics.
• The decline of trust in politicians - Where once politicians were regarded as public servants, now they are regarded as figures who serve
narrow sectional interests not the public interest. A recent nationwide
survey in Australia shows the depth of the problem (Goot, 2002;
Markus, 2013). Only 4% of those who were asked to respond to the
question ‘do you trust the politicians?’ responded without equivocation. The majority answered negatively. Similarly, when citizens were
asked to rank professions in the order to which they could be trusted,
the response was that politicians ranked lowest of all and behind the
usual scapegoats such as lawyers, real-estate agents and second-hand
car salesman. As already noted, the stock of today’s crop of politicians
has never been lower – as reconfirmed through multiple iterations of
longitudinal survey data such as Eurobarometer, the World Values Survey as well as discrete country studies such as that referred to above.
The data is not uniform, in that there are areas of the world that show
slower declines than others (as in Denmark for example); but overall
the impression statistically and discursively is increasingly to query
the integrity of and need for politicians. Indeed, the very term ‘politi-
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
cian’ has become a byword for sleaze, corruption and self-interest. It is
no surprise then that today’s movements seek to distance themselves
from the inheritance of ‘the politician’. Where leadership figures do
emerge, they display very different virtues to those associated with
traditional politicians. For example in Spain the popularity of Ada Colau and Sister Teresa Forcades can be traced in good measure to their
distance from the traditional figure of the politicians. Both are ‘antipolitical’ figures. Colau is a street activist working with PAH to highlight
the iniquities enjoyed by ordinary people faced with repossession of
their home. Forcades is a nun who by nature of her professional commitment disavowed the trappings of power to defend the poor and
needy. It would be difficult to imagine figures who are less like today’s
politicians and elites.
• Interest in and knowledge of mainstream politics - Notwithstanding
the fact that we live in highly politicised times, the decline of interest
in ‘high politics’, that is the politics of our elected representatives had
never been so marked (Flinders, 2012). Where once serious newspapers carried many pages of commentary on parliamentary and
presidential proceedings, now the focus on ‘infotainment’. TV and radio
programmes devoted to scrutinising and examining politics that once
occupied a prime-time position, are relegated to ‘the graveyard slot’,
code for late-nights, early Sunday mornings – or they have been moved
to obscure and little watched TV channels (A-PAC, The Parliamentary
Channel, and so on). Amongst even the most politically literate part of
the population the activities of our representatives attracts contempt
rather than interest. By contrast, some of the great success stories in
terms of mobilising young people have been online initiatives such as
Avaaz.org and GetUp.org (Vromen, 2003). The common denominator
in initiatives such as these is that they focus on particular issues which
then become the subject of an extensive online campaign. They do so
without representatives and representation, instead trading on crowd
power: the ability of large numbers of people acting together to generate a response from the elites. This is symptomatic of how politics is
moving. Many young people are no longer interested in the electoral
process or in the activities of their representatives.They are passionate
about a particular issue such as climate change, or the fate of a particular species, or sweatshop labour. Issues such as these do not translate into the kind of political engagement that is easily captured by
traditional media focusing on the activities in the nation’s capitals.
Índex
115
116
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
Little wonder then that, as it often appears, young people seem ‘apathetic’ or ‘switched off’. If what we mean by these terms is an interest
in mainstream electoral politics then that may be true. But as my comments indicate, there is more to the story than this. Much more.
However we think about the health of representative politics it is difficult
to avoid the conclusion that the crisis is permanent rather than temporary.
But why is this? What are the drivers of the underlying change that we are
witnessing in the advanced democracies?
This is a complex and highly contested question, and one that only elicits
a lot of head scratching amongst interested commentators. But what I would
add is the degree to which this collapse in the attractiveness and credibility
of representative politics is not limited to official or mainstream political
processes. It is something that is quite observable across a broad range of
political phenomenon, whether it be the emergence of an anti-representational discourse in the Zapatista insurgency or the similarly non-representative
Charter of the World Social Forum, perhaps the most discussed product of
the last phase of revolt before this one – the anti-globalisation movement
(Sen, 2004; Tormey, 2006).
Clearly there is something going on that takes us beyond disaffection
with mainstream politics. There is a major shift or transformation underway
in the nature of political subjectivity such that representation, the practice
of being represented or representing others, has become something to be
avoided, resisted, negated. When we think back to the vital role that representation has played in terms of the development of movements such as
socialism and communism, and also the role it continues to play in many
parts of the world where poverty is politically disabling, this is a remarkable
phenomenon. It is also a highly complex one where caution is needed before proceeding. Nevertheless I want to offer a few observations about what
I think this means and where it is heading for our purposes.
3. whAt’S thE mAttER wIth REPRESEntAtIvE PolItICS?
Representative politics is in historical terms the product of the early
modern imagination (Manin, 1997; Brito Viera and Runciman, 2008). The
first theorist to discuss representation as intrinsic to the legitimacy of the
sovereign was Thomas Hobbes writing in the middle of the 17th century.
Representation as a political practice and the means by which societies
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
came to democratise themselves is a phenomenon of the late 18th and
early 19th centuries. It is associated with the emergence of collective identities and in particular class, nationality and ideology. Under each of these
headings citizens were encouraged to see themselves as part of some
larger aggregate identity that could be represented whether in the form of
a political party, a nation-state or a political movement. The politics of the
period resonated strongly with calls to these identities as the basis of mobilisation: «Power to the people!»; «Workers of the world unite!», «We hold
these truths to be self-evident…»; «Man was born free, yet everywhere is in
chains». We could go on.
The important dimension of representative politics was that ordinary
people felt the need and desire to be represented. They identified with the
signifiers and felt that they were included in the proclamations and discourse of those who would represent. What is becoming clearer is that this
process of identity formation is becoming more difficult, less complete,
more problematic. Globalisation promotes a different dynamic, one that is
highly disruptive of the formation of collective or aggregate identities. To
take class as one example, where under Fordist conditions it was clear who
the workers were, what their shared interests are, and equally who the managers were and what their interests were, under post-Fordist conditions such
distinctions of position, power and privilege become blurred. Earlier industrial processes based around factories, mines, and mass production are giving way to varieties of affective labour that complexifies class formation.The
neat distinctions of class that are so clarifying in political terms have given
way a dominant ideology that insists that we can advance through hard
work, determination and ‘positive thinking’. Class politics has been in decline and along with it the hopes of those who see politics in terms of the
defence of the needs and interests of the poorest elements in society. One
of the victims of the ebbing of representative politics has been social democratic parties whose rationale was to defend the working class from the
more rapacious aspects of contemporary capitalism. And yet social democratic parties have suffered the same fate as all the rest: decline, exhaustion
and slump.
It is not just class identity that has fragmented under the pressure of
changes associated with globalisation, it is also national and ethnic identities.
A key feature of globalisation is transnational migration caused by wars, climate change, economic opportunity, collapsing forms of governance, decolonisation, and so on. The accelerating movement of peoples, particularly
towards the metropolitan spaces is deeply disruptive of the formation and
Índex
117
118
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
maintenance of clear and distinct identities around which representation
and representational politics rotates (Sassen, 2006). What seems more to be
the case is that second and third generations develop novel and hybrid kinds
of identity that induce a perception of ‘newness’ that is difficult to capture
in representational terms. This doesn’t prevent states from trying to bolster
a sense of national identity or ‘patriotism’ in multicultural citizens. Many
states spend huge sums of money trying to generate that sense of common
identity they believe to be essential to maintain community and a sense of
common purpose. With mixed results, it has to be said.
When combined with another facet of our contemporary world, communicative abundance, it is clear that subjects have access to such a plethora of
kinds and forms of information that seeking to bring this multiplicity back
into a unified political subject is becoming an ever more demanding exercise. The metropolitan space is characterised by a high degree of individualisation (or ‘personalisation’ as this phenomenon is also termed) in which
subjects perceive themselves to be the authors of their own destiny as opposed to being tied to the collective fate of a particular identity or group.
This, too, is part of the modern imaginary, and arguably serves the needs and
purposes of capitalists better than it does their critics. As long as individuals
are defined in terms of differentiation by consumer preferences, then of
course it can be recuperated by capitalism in a way that is self promoting. If
by ‘individualisation’ is meant choosing a pair of Nikes, as opposed to a pair
of Adidas, then there is obviously no threat to the status quo. However, the
story is more complicated than that. Individualisation can also inform and
promote a kind of reflexivity towards received truths and inherited institutions and practices (Beck et al., 1994). It’s partly for this reason that commentators such as Robert Putnam are so wary of the modernising tendencies that underpin the process of individualisation. He would prefer us to be
tied into a pattern of activity and identity associated with our parents and
grandparents, a kind of embedding in local community structures that can
be trusted to produce docile and obedient subjects (Putnam, 1995).
Reflexive subjects on the other hand would seem to be far from docile
or obedient. They are, on the contrary, questioning, critical, demanding of
authority, politicians, states. Gone it seems is the aura of authority no matter
where it is located – and not just in politics. The aura of doctors is challenged by access to mountains of information over the Internet against
which to check their prognosis and prescriptions. The aura of university
lecturers is challenged by students with access to the very same sources and
materials as lecturers themselves. We live in a world where individuals in-
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
creasingly feel themselves to be sources of authority on whatever it is they
take an interest in. The Internet has provided an infinite amount of knowledge, encouraging the perception that the division of labour between those
who ‘know’ and those who don’t, those who lead and those who follow, is
redundant (Shirkey, 2009). Professionals and those enjoying positional authority have seen their power base wither. The monopoly on knowledge,
insight, wisdom - once taken for granted by intellectuals - is disappearing.
Individualisation at this level represents a certain self empowerment, and
one that makes us reluctant to cede voice, influence, power to others. Individualisation is corrosive of the very rationale that prompted support for
political parties, trade unions and other bodies created to represent others:
the need to empower someone else to pursue collectives needs and interests. That ideology or imaginary is rapidly dissolving in the acid bath of individualisation.
4. thE PolItICS of InDIvIDuAlISAtIon
It is a common assumption amongst sociologists interested in the impact
of individualisation to draw pessimistic conclusions about the impact of
these developments on politics. Individualisation at one level represents individualism, or the pursuit of my own needs and desires to the exclusion of
consideration for others (Bauman, 2001). There is certainly an element of
truth in the suggestion. However, concluding that individualisation necessarily results in such outcomes needs to be treated with caution. As is now well
documented, individualisation can also be the basis for collective action, albeit of a novel kind. One of the most eye-catching developments in recent
years has been the growth of ethical consumerism or ethical shopping
(Micheletti, 2003). This is using the power of the consumer to generate better outcomes for otherwise exploited groups often located in the developing world or in the poorer parts of society. Through the use of boycotts or
buy-cotts consumers, so it is held, can exercise a significant degree of influence over corporations, supermarkets and other actors in the marketplace.
This is a mild iteration of what is now termed ‘swarm logic’ or the power
of ‘the crowd’ (Howe, 2008; Miller, 2010). Swarms and crowds obey a different logic to those engaged in representative politics where there is a natural
distinction between those who represent, the active part, and those who are
represented, who are the passive or pacified part. Individuals engaged in
swarm politics are themselves actors. More than this they are not directed
Índex
119
120
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
by someone, but rather part of an ecology that is itself without direction
from above or anywhere else for that matter.
This sense of a collectivity that obeys its own logic is attractive to political theorists seeking a style or manner of acting ‘beyond’ or ‘after’ representation. To take an obvious example, Hardt and Negri evoke such a politics in their idea of the multitude as the subject of a contemporary radical
praxis (Hardt and Negri, 2004). They look forward to the time when ‘the
multitude’ is able to govern itself without the need for representatives or
interlocutors. Their account is informed by a vision of biopolitical production that sets great store by the potentiality of technology to erase the
need for intermediaries. It’s a demand that is on the rise in the contemporary political context as activists latch onto the potentiality of P2P networking and other technologies that promote self-activity and direct participation (Toret, 2013).
It is difficult not to conclude that there is a certain romanticism at work
in imagining that technology will enable the development of a kind of
transparent self-governance of the kind promoted by Hardt and Negri.
Crowd or swarm logic is best conceptualised in terms of the performance
of relatively simple actions: the initiation of an occupation, a protest
against a parliament, acts of self defence against police or military brutality
and so on (Arquilla and Ronfeldt, 2000). They are thus best conceptualised
in terms of an evanescent style of politics. Crowds and swarms are summoned quickly for a relatively simple or straightforward purpose, and disappear once that purpose has been fulfilled or the rationale completed.
The more complex the terrain, the more complex the variables in terms of
decision-making, the greater the need becomes for quasi-permanent institutionalisation, structures, accountability, constitutions. As we see in the
unfolding occupations in Spain, the swarm like logic that initially brought
people onto the streets quickly developed a different dynamic, that of the
deliberative assembly (Castañeda, 2012). Once decisions had to be made,
so differences of opinion and perspective required procedure, deliberative
norms around participation, voting mechanisms and so forth. In short,
swarm-like behaviour quickly developed into what we might term politics,
or the management of dissensus.
Equally significant in terms of how these events and initiatives have unfolded is the resistance to generating representative structures and procedures. As we have already remarked, very few of the events and initiatives
that we have been documenting gave rise to representatives or to representative bodies – even if one of their purposes is to call for greater repre-
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
sentation, a second transition, a recall of Parliament. In this sense the individualised character of these revolts is clear to see. Over and again we notice
the reluctance of participants in these events to nominate others to speak
for them. We notice rather a clear preference for direct democratic and deliberative procedures that preserve the integrity of each singular voice
within the initiative. We notice the hostility towards the development of
bureaucracies, standing officers and officialdom, majoritarian voting practices and all the other paraphernalia associated with representative politics.
These are eruptions of a highly individualised kind, but whose character is
the generation of political procedures that seek to be participatory, consensual and deliberative – or genuinely collective. Of course not all of these
initiatives lived up to these expectations. Perhaps none of them did or have
done so to date. But the point is they often have a prefigurative aspect to
them in the sense of embodying an ideal or vision of democracy sharply at
odds with the practice of actually existing representative democracy. In
other words many of these movements and revolts carried within them an
immanent and sometimes quite explicit critique of representation and representative democracy whilst at the same time pointing towards other kinds
of democracy felt to be more authentic or in the expression of the Spanish
protesters ‘real’ – as in Real Democracia Ya.
So returning to the earlier problematic, I don’t think that the emergence
of an individualised politics necessarily equates to the kind of introspective,
narcissistic or self-interested politics that is often assumed in the commentary. What it does equate to is the rejection of what for the past 200 years
has been the standard form that politics has taken: a political party with a
clear programme or manifesto seeking to represent the needs and interests
of a particular group, class, nationality or ethnicity. What is becoming clear is
that whatever future there is for the political party lies in it rejected the
vertical logic formerly associated with political parties, which is to say a
more or less sharply differentiated division of labour between party leaders
and the rest. Political parties can and will survive, but only on the basis that
they become flatter, more horizontal and better able to engage interested
individuals as part of a collective and participatory ecology (Hughes, 2011;
Gautney, 2012).
The emergence of Podemos and Syriza is of course an interesting test of
the hypothesis: ‘street’ parties that are able to combine both a coherent ‘vertical’ or populist face to the electorate with a sense of engagement for activists who might otherwise be directing their energies to more avowedly
horizontal or ‘connective’ initiatives. It’s a difficult trick to pull off, though
Índex
121
122
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
perhaps vital if the insurgent styles of anti-austerity, pro-democracy activisms
on display are to leverage institutional and political change in the short and
medium term. However, theirs is a very different mission and ‘politics’ to that
of the traditional left parties they seem to be supplanting (PSOE, PSOK). Gone
the accent on building membership, capacity, funding for the long slow deliberative assault on elections, the cronyism and careful manipulation of
delegates at the party conference and so on. Replaced by a politics of excitement, immediacy, connectedness that speaks directly to the politics of the
streets and squares from where many of their voluble supporters have come
from.
There will be leftists out there who say that socialist and communist parties have more or less approximated this form since the early debates in the
first working men’s international. Yet the history of party politics offers
mixed evidence. Examples of really inclusive political parties have been few
and far between. But ICT is undeniably a game changer. It offers the prospect
of much greater interactivity, transparency and participation that has hitherto been possible – for new and old parties. At the same time this high
degree of porosity and transparency creates other kinds of issues for activists to overcome. In the past the success and failure of political parties has
often traded on the credibility of those chosen to lead it.The successful parties of the past two centuries were led by charismatic or exemplary individuals able to mobilise ordinary people at election time as well as activists
between elections. Will the new political parties, the new political organisations feel the need to invest in leader figures, in populist strategies and tactics? And if they do, will this alienate those whose political instincts lead
them to reject representatives and represented politics? These are not just
hypothetical questions. They get to the heart of the issues facing activists in
Spain, Greece, Turkey and elsewhere where the initial energy of street politics has given rise to opportunities to advance in electoral terms as well as
in terms of the swarm or crowd.
5. whERE IS thE movEmEnt now?
Before answering this question directly, it might be useful to rehearse the
central components of the argument offered here.What I have been suggesting is that to understand the current phase of revolt and rebellion requires
us to step back and take a larger view of what is happening in the political
field.What I noted was the similarity between the various revolts around the
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
world in terms of a rejection of the traditional structures associated with
representation and representational politics in favour of immediate and direct action - greatly facilitated by ICT. We then went on to note that this is
consonant with the wider crisis of representation playing out to greater or
lesser degree across representative democracies.Whilst many commentators
insist that this crisis is located in short-term or contingent factors such as the
politics of austerity or recession, in my view it is consonant with larger
changes in the nature of modernity.This is the modernity of nation states, of
discrete territorial entities enjoying sovereignty over their affairs, and presiding over a relatively homogenous ethnic or national group. Globalisation is
highly disruptive of this pattern of political affinity and identity. It is also highly
disruptive of sovereignty and territoriality, which in turn have been the basis
of contemporary governance. More broadly, modernity also equates to individualisation, or the adoption of modes and patterns of behaviour that escape categorisation in terms of collective identities. Individualisation is thus
corrosive of representation and representative politics.
I would argue that the revolts and rebellions that we see around Europe
and indeed the world have in common their rejection of the logic of representative politics and representation more generally. This often means that
they are seen as anti-political gestures, a rejection of politics and democracy.
I think the opposite is true. What unites many of these initiatives is the realisation that representation is being used as a cover for the domestication
and emasculation of politics for the benefit of the few, or the 1%.Where once
there seemed some credibility to the idea that politicians spoke for us, and
on our behalf, that credibility has increasingly waned if it has not disappeared altogether, hence the resonant power of contemporary slogans such
as «We are the 99%» and «Real Democracia Ya» – in their own quintessential
representative slogans – but at another angle anti-representative, particularly
when it comes to thinking about what representative politics has become:
the politics of the 1%. The figure of the politician has instead become a
proxy for a kind of zombie-fication of politics, a politics that seems to be ‘full
of life’, but is instead better understood as a parasitic body sucking the life
and energy out of communities (Giroux, 2011). But rather than turn to other
kinds of politician, to revolutionary leaders or heroic figures, what is noteworthy in the current conjuncture is the manner by which these initiatives
have set their face against renewing the parties, trade unions and traditional
organisations did the job of representing us. It is as if the tenor of political
action has undergone a paradigm shift away from the preoccupation with
generating new representative bodies, figures, claims towards a «connective
Índex
123
124
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
politics», a politics of networks, swarms, collectives, occupations, prefigurations (Bennett and Segerberg, 2012). Politics is undergoing a Gestalt shift.
This still leaves the question of where all this is going.
As is clear then, in looking at present revolts, rebellions, protests we are
not describing a movement of a traditional kind. Far from it, we are describing a rhizomatic movement against traditional ‘politics’ including the traditional oppositional politics (Deleuze and Guattari 1988). What we are seeing
is the rejection of the preoccupation with programmes, manifestoes and
such like towards what we might call a resonant form of politics where the
object is less the promotion of a singular ideal about how we should live so
much as the recuperation of political agency and political space. In doing so
these movements and revolts remind us how far contemporary political
practices have moved from the ideal of democracy as the affair of ‘anyone
and everyone’. It reminds us that representative democracy was born not as
a mechanism for permitting us to govern ourselves, but as J.S. Mill reminds
us, as a means of preventing us from being ‘misgoverned’ (Mill, 1972). Mill’s
quote reminds us that the origins of representative democracy bear their
trace in the desire of those already in power to prevent ‘tyranny of the majority’ or what might ordinarily be regarded as democracy (Manin, 1997). From
this point of view democracy is not a first order quality of contemporary
political systems, but a second order means for ensuring that property and
privilege remain intact. Democracy has long been regarded by liberal elites
as a provisional and contingent virtue, and one that could only be justified
insofar as it permitted accumulation, dispossession and acquisition of further wealth. Quite simply, representative democracy has been the handmaiden for capitalist globalisation.
Just as the dream of constant expansion crashed and burned in financial
crisis, so the dream of democracy as a Schumpetarian ‘rotation of elites’ has
crashed and burned in the profligacy, corruption and heartless self-serving
of today’s politicians. Many of today’s revolts and rebellions, though born of
economic discontent, nevertheless carry an important political message.
This is that the era of the politician as privileged actor-expert working on
our behalf is over.The era of the recuperation of political power and agency
by individuals acting together collectively is just beginning. So the irony is
that just at the moment when media dominated elites want to tell us that
these protests and revolts are a threat to democracy as ‘anti-politics’, the reality would seem to be the reverse: they are movements that articulate in direct, and increasingly visceral terms, the desire of many ordinary people to
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
exercise greater control over the world in which they live and not to be
subject to a far-removed political and economic class.
So perhaps democracy as a concept is coming full circle. As Ranciere reminds us, democracy used to mean a raucous, noisy resonant politics that
engaged everyone (Rancière, 2006). So determined were the Greeks to operationalise this idea of rule by anyone and everyone that they insisted that
democratic office holding be allocated on the basis of lot, thereby undercutting the possibility for elites to exercise domination over the demos. But it
was Plato and those who, as Ranciere puts it,‘hate’ democracy who won the
day, devising a mechanism whereby our interests and needs could act as
proxies for direct participation and deliberation in common affairs. In challenging rejecting representative styles and modes of politics, the politics of
the ‘politicians’, today’s revolts are not just a negation – of governance, representatives, organised politics – they evince a democratic sensibility: the
demand of ordinary people to count, to be heard, to participate. Today’s revolts are not a challenge to democracy – they are democracy. Its by no
means ironic that the epicentre for this new style of politics: a raucous, ‘unruly’ politics in which ‘the demos’ appears as both subject and object of
politics seems to find its fullest voice in Greece – home of the democracy
of «anyone and everyone».
REfEREnCES
ALONSO, S. (2014): «Votas pero no eliges: la democracia y la crisis de la deuda
soberana en la eurozona». Recerca. Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi, 15,
pp. 21–53.
ANDUIZA, E., CRISTANCHO, C. AND SABUCEDO, J. M. (2014): «Mobilization through
Online Social Networks: The Political Protest of the Indignados in Spain»,
Information, Communication & Society, 17(6), pp. 750-64.
ARQUILLA, J. and D. RONFELDT (2000): «Swarming and the Future of Conflict»,
RAND Corporation, Available at: http://www.rand.org/publications/DB/
DB311/. (Retrieved August 2 2004).
BAUMAN, Z. (2001): The Individualized Society, Cambridge, Polity Press,.
BECK, U., A. GIDDENS and S. LASH (1994): Reflexive Modernization : Politics,
Tradition and Aesthetics in the Modern Social Order, Cambridge, Polity.
BENNETT, W. L. and A. SEGERBERG (2012): «The Logic of Connective Action», Information, Communication & Society, 15(5), pp. 739-768.
Índex
125
126
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
BRITO VIERA, M. and D. RUNCIMAN (2008): Representation, Cambridge, Polity.
CASTAÑEDA, E. (2012): «The Indignados of Spain: A Precedent to Occupy Wall
Street», Social Movement Studies, 11(3-4), pp. 309-319.
CASTELLS, M. (2012): Networks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in
the Internet Age, Cambridge, Polity Press.
CHRISTENSEN, H. (2011): «Political Activities on the Internet: Slacktivism or Political Participation by Other Means?», First Monday 16. Available at:
http://firstmonday.org/article/view/3336/2767 (Retrieved May 2014).
DALTON, R. J. (2004): Democratic Challenges, Democratic Choices: The Erosion of Political Support in Advanced Industrial Democracies, Oxford,
Oxford University Press.
DELEUZE, G. and F. GUATTARI (1988): A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and
Schizophrenia, London, Athlone Press.
FEENSTRA, R. (2015): «Activist and Citizen Political Repertoire in Spain: A Reflection Based on Civil Society Theory and Different Logics of Political
Participation», Journal of Civil Society (Online First).
FEENSTRA, R. and KEANE, J. (2014): «Politics in Spain: A case of monitory democracy», VOLUNTAS. International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations, 25, pp. 1262–1280.
FLINDERS, M. (2012): Defending Politics: Why Democracy Matters in the
Twenty-First Century, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
GAUNTNEY, H. (2012): Protest and Organization in the Alternative Globalization Era: NGOs, Social Movements, and Political Parties, London, Palgrave Macmillan.
GIROUX, H. A. (2011): Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino
Capitalism, New York, Peter Lang.
GOOT, M. (2002): «Distrustful, Disenchanted and Disengaged? Polled Opinion
on Politics, Politicians and the Parties: An Historical Perspective», Parliament and Public Opinion, Papers on Parliament 38. Available at: http://
www.aph.gov.au/senate/~/~/link.aspx?_id=AC6C7A66BBC149AC9C675
C57939B5591&_z=z (Retrieved January 2014).
HARDT, M. and A. NEGRI (2004): Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of
Empire, New York, Penguin.
HAY, C. (2007): Why We Hate Politics, Cambridge, Polity.
HILL, S. (2013): Digital Revolutions: Activism in the Internet Age, London,
New Internationalist.
HOLLOWAY, J. (2002): Change the World without Taking Power, London, Pluto
Press.
Índex
SIMON TORMEY Democracy will never be the same again: 21st Century Protest and the Transformation of Politics
HOWE, J. (2008): Crowdsourcing: How the Power of the Crowd Is Driving the
Future of Business, New York, Random House.
HUGHES, N. (2011): «Young People Took to the Streets and All of a Sudden All
of the Political Parties Got Old’: The 15M Movement in Spain», Social
Movement Studies, 10(4), pp. 407-413.
MAIR, P. and I. VAN BIEZEN (2001): «Party Membership in Twenty European Democracies, 1980-2000», Party Politics, 7(1), pp. 5-21.
Manin, B.. (1997): The Principles of Representative Government, Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press.
MARCOS, Subcomandante. (2001): Our Word Is Our Weapon: Selected Writings,
London, Sepent’s Tail.
MARKUS,A. (2013): «Mapping Social Cohesion», Melbourne: Monash University.
http://www.scanlonfoundation.org.au/docs/2013_SocC_report_final.
pdf.
MASON, P. (2013): Why It’s Still Kicking Off Everywhere: The New Global
Revolutions, London, Verso.
MICHELETTI, M. (2003): Political Virtue and Shopping: Individuals, Consumerism and Collective Action, New York, Palgrave.
MILL, J. S. (1972): «Considerations on Representative Government», Three Essays. J. S. Mill, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
MILLER, P. (2010): The Smart Swarm: How Understanding Flocks, Schools,
and Colonies Can Make Us Better at Communicating, Decision Making, and Getting Things Done, New York, Avery Publishing Group, Inc.
MOROZOV, E. (2012): The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom,
London, Penguin.
POSTILL, J. (2013): «Democracy in an Age of Viral Reality: A Media Epidemiography of Spain’s Indignados Movement», Ethnography. 15(1), pp. 50-68.
PUTNAM, R. D. (1995): «Bowling Alone: America’s Declining Social Capital»,
Journal of democracy, 6(1), pp. 65-78.
RANCIERE, J. (2006): Hatred of Democracy, London, Verso.
SASSEN, S. (2006): Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages, Princeton, Princeton University Press.
SEN, J. (Ed.) (2004): World Social Forum: Challenging Empires. New Delhi:
Viveka.
SHIRKEY, C. (2009): Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing without Organizations, New York, Penguin.
TORET, J. (Ed.) (2013): Tecnopolítica: La Potencia De Las Multitudes Conectadas. El Sistema Red 15m, Un Nuevo Paradigma De La Política, Barcelona, UOC.
Índex
127
128
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.6 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 107-128
TORMEY, S. (2015): The end of Representative Politics, Cambridge, Polity.
— (2013): Anti-Capitalism: A Beginner’s Guide, Oxford, Oneworld.
—(2006): «‘Not in My Name’: Deleuze, Zapatismo and the Critique of Representation», Parliamentary Affairs, 59(1), pp. 138-154.
VAN BIEZEN, I., P. MAIR, and T. POGUNTKE (2012): «Going, Going,... Gone? The Decline of Party Membership in Contemporary Europe», European Journal
of Political Research, 51(1), pp. 24-56.
VROMEN, A. (2003): «‘People Try to Put Us Down…’: Participatory Citizenship Of’generation X» Australian Journal of Political Science, 38(1),
pp. 79-99.
Índex
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 129-147
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7
Reseñas de libros
Amartya Sen (2010): La idea de la Justicia, madrid, Santillana Ediciones generales, madrid. Reseñado por martha Rodríguez Coronel, universitat Jaume I. Reseña recibida: 26 septiembre 2013. Reseña aceptada: 15 abril 2014.
La idea de la Justicia es un libro
escrito por Amartya Sen, el ganador
del premio Nobel de Economía de
1998. Representa la síntesis de más
de 50 años de su investigación académica. Consta de 18 capítulos, de
los cuales los diez primeros se refieren a cuestiones teóricas sobre la
justicia y los restantes a temas relacionados con la aplicación de los
fundamentos en los cuales se basan
los juicios sobre la justicia. Entre estos temas se encuentran como principales: las libertades, las capacidades, los recursos, la felicidad, la
igualdad y el bienestar.
Como siempre, a través de fábulas, cuentos e historias, Sen ilustra al
lector haciéndole comprender muy
fácilmente la problemática de la injusticia y entonces de la justicia, desarrollando su particular senda de
aproximación a esta cuestión: una
combinación de filosofía moral y política y de economía. Para la construcción de una teoría de la justicia,
según el autor, es clave la identificación de las injusticias reparables, así
como los razonamientos para la evaluación de justicia o injusticia.
La teoría de la justicia que trata de
fundamentar es amplia, desarrollando el tema del razonamiento y escrutinio imparcial sobre las razones de
justicia y sus conclusiones. De igual
forma expone el asunto del peso de
las transgresiones del comportamiento y la insuficiencia institucional en
la aparición y mantenimiento de injusticias remediables. Su propósito
es esclarecer la cuestión del mejoramiento de la justicia y la superación
de la injusticia, a diferencia de teorías anteriormente expuestas que se
centran en la caracterización de sociedades perfectamente justas.
El autor aclara que los antecedentes de su enfoque provienen del
«periodo de inconformidad intelectual de la Ilustración europea», teniendo en cuenta ideas procedentes
de sociedades no occidentales. Esto
le permitió ampliar el alcance de los
argumentos de la literatura occidental. No se inclina por la corriente
contractualista de autores como Locke, Rousseau, Hobbes, Kant, más recientemente Rawls, en el que la única tarea de la teoría de la justicia es
la caracterización de las «justas instituciones»; opta más bien por una vaÍndex
130
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
riedad de enfoques desarrollados por
Smith, Condorcet, Wollstonecraft,
Bentham, Marx, Mill, que comparten
un interés común: la comparación de
las distintas maneras en que viven las
personas, que se encuentran condicionadas por las instituciones, pero a
la vez por el propio comportamiento
de la gente y la interacción social,
entre otros, atendiendo siempre al
avance o retroceso de la justicia.
El camino del trascendentalismo
institucionalista o contractualismo tiene dos problemas, según Sen. A saber,
primero, bajo este enfoque no puede
haber consenso razonado: la cuestión
de la factibilidad de encontrar una solución trascendental de consenso; y
segundo, la identificación de la situación perfecta probablemente inalcanzable: esta es la cuestión de la redundancia de la búsqueda de la solución
trascendental. Por estas razones escoge como punto de partida a la «otra»
tradición, la comparativa, sustentada
en la teoría de la elección social.
La justicia se puede comprender
de dos maneras, una basada en esquemas y otra basada en realizaciones. Sen realiza una analogía de estos
dos modos de ver la justicia con las
palabras niti y nyaya del sánscrito
clásico. El término niti tiene varios
significados, entre sus principales
está: idoneidad de las instituciones y
corrección del comportamiento; el
vocablo nyaya entraña un concepto
comprehensivo de la justicia realizada. «Aun cuando las instituciones esÍndex
tablecidas sean idóneas, si el pez
grande puede devorar al pez chico
hay una flagrante violación de la justicia humana entendida como nyaya» (2010: 52). Para Sen, la perspectiva del nyaya se comprendería
ampliamente como un proceso inclusivo y no solo como la realización
última de justicia.
Bajo el enfoque comparativo o del
nyaya, la democracia, por ejemplo, se
evalúa no solo por las instituciones
que existen, sino por la disponibilidad
de información, por la viabilidad de las
discusiones, por la capacidad de ser
escuchadas las voces de los diferentes
sectores de la población. La apuesta se
realiza siempre por la razón pública
como vía de impulso de justicia global. «Puede no existir, en efecto, ningún esquema social perfectamente
justo e identificable del cual pudiere
surgir un acuerdo imparcial» (2010:
49). «Lo que se requiere […] es un
acuerdo, basado en la razón pública,
sobre la gradación de las alternativas
realizables» (2010: 47).
A pesar que los principios de justicia que defiende este autor no serán definidos por las instituciones,
sino más bien por las libertades de
las personas, las instituciones no dejan de tener un papel importante en
esta teoría. La vía comparativa contiene, también, la raíz del enfoque del
niti: la confianza en la razón y en la
deliberación sobre la justicia.
Aunque Sen aboga por el uso de
la razón como una disciplina de exa-
131
Reseñas de libros
men crítico de las creencias y razones expuestas, por otro lado, insiste
que en esta discusión o escrutinio
razonado no se pueden dejar de lado
a los sentimientos morales y a las
motivaciones de las personas. En su
propuesta de justicia, apunta igualmente hacia la importancia de procurar el bien de otros, ya que no solo
estamos obligados a buscar nuestro
propio bien. Para el economista es
totalmente razonable que en la búsqueda de nuestros propios fines hagamos un espacio para los fines del
los otros.
Cuando las realizaciones sociales
se evalúan desde el punto de vista de
las capacidades que la gente posee
verdaderamente, y no desde el punto
de vista de su utilidad o felicidad, los
cambios en la vida de las personas,
tanto individual como colectivamente, pueden ser sorprendentemente
positivos. Así, las personas se observan entre ellas de manera inclusiva,
debido a la concienciación de las libertades sustantivas que disfrutan,
en vez de ignorar todo lo que no
sean placeres o utilidades que pueden tener o experimentar. Existe,
conjuntamente, otro aspecto significativo de la libertad como capacidad:
nos hace responsables por lo que
hacemos. La libertad para actuar no
puede limitarse solamente a la idea
de ventaja social, sino a la responsabilidad del poder de facto, reflexión
por la cual Sen relaciona las obligaciones con el concepto de justicia.
Este trabajo trata de ilustrar la necesidad de transformación de raíz de
las teorías de la justicia que están
sobre la mesa. La inquietud del autor
es una auténtica preocupación ética.
En las cuatro partes del libro: «Las
exigencias de la justicia», «Formas de
razonamiento», «Los materiales de la
justicia» y «Razón pública y democracia», se evidencia que la motivación
principal de Sen no es la búsqueda
de una verdad, ni de una situación
perfecta, sino de una teoría que
ofrezca soluciones viables para las
situaciones de injusticias reales que
viven los hombres hoy en día.
Índex
132
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
Silvia federici (2013): Revolución en punto cero. Trabajo doméstico, reproducción y luchas feministas, traficantes de Sueños, madrid. Reseñado por maria medina-vicent, universitat Jaume I. Reseña recibida: 6 mayo 2015. Reseña aceptada: 12 junio 2015.
A través de la obra Revolución en
punto cero. Trabajo doméstico, reproducción y luchas feministas, Silvia Federici nos abre una ventana al
amplio abanico de luchas que subyacen a la práctica feminista. Sus trabajos se sitúan en el movimiento autónomo feminista dentro de la tradición
marxista, desde donde «rechaza firmemente la idea de que patriarcado,
trabajo doméstico y desigualdad de
las mujeres se sitúen “fuera” del capitalismo» (Echevarria, 2014: 1). A partir de las bases que le otorgan el feminismo radical y el materialismo
histórico, la autora pone su foco de
atención en el trabajo reproductivo
como parte vital de la lucha política
feminista. Así pues, debido a la frágil
situación de las mujeres en un marco
actual de crisis del capital (Carrasco,
2009; Larrañaga y Jubeto, 2009), se
vuelve necesario reflexionar junto a
Federici sobre el papel de las mujeres y la reproducción social en el
sistema capitalista.
En la primera parte de la obra, la
autora pretende «Teorizar y politizar
el trabajo doméstico». De este modo,
Federici aborda el salario doméstico
desde una perspectiva política, partiendo del reconocimiento de que el
trabajo del hogar «ha sido transformado en un atributo natural de la
Índex
psique y personalidad femeninas»
(2013: 37). Esta idea responde a la
«glorificación de la familia como ámbito privado» (2013: 62) contrapuesto al ámbito público, con lo que el
primero se convierte en «el territorio
de las mujeres, el de la reproducción,
el de los afectos, el de los cuidados»
(Salazar, 2012: 97). En este sentido es
en el que Federici considera que reclamar el Salario por el Trabajo Doméstico (STD), significa rechazar el rol
asignado a las mujeres por parte del
capital, «rechazar este trabajo como
expresión de nuestra naturaleza (hablando de las mujeres)» (2013: 39).
Mediante dicha reclamación, iniciada
por las welfare mothers en los EE. UU.
de los setenta, se visibiliza que este
trabajo genera dinero para el capital,
y que por tanto, solamente cuando
se revele como una cuestión política,
las mujeres podrán gozar del derecho a decidir si realizar o no este
tipo de trabajos. Sin embargo, como
señala la autora, el STD despierta un
amplio rechazo en la izquierda marxista, tradición que «ha estado de
acuerdo en la marginalidad del trabajo doméstico en la reproducción del
capital» (2013: 52), y que en consecuencia, ha relegado a una posición
secundaria las reclamaciones feministas, ofreciendo a las mujeres nada
133
Reseñas de libros
más que «el derecho a estar más explotadas» (2013: 53).
La conclusión que se puede extraer de la primera parte de la obra
es que el feminismo, entendido como
el movimiento por la igualdad entre
mujeres y hombres, no ha puesto en
duda el sistema material en el que se
producen las desigualdades, sino que
«se ha identificado con la adquisición de igualdad de oportunidades
en el mercado laboral» (2013: 94),
una igualdad que supone una doble
explotación para las mujeres: en el
hogar y en el mercado laboral. De
este modo, tener en cuenta las condiciones materiales y no «priorizar el
papel de la conciencia, como si la
esclavitud fuese una condición mental» (2013: 93), resulta clave para
afrontar los retos de la lucha feminista hoy en día.
La segunda parte de la obra recibe el título «Globalización y reproducción social», y se centra en estudiar cómo afectan la globalización y
la Nueva División Internacional del
Trabajo (NDIT) a las mujeres. La autora
parte del hecho de que la creación
de las zonas de libre comercio no ha
supuesto una mejora en las condiciones de vida de quien habitanta el
Tercer Mundo, ya que ha permitido
que «las empresas extranjeras mantengan salarios inferiores a los niveles de subsistencia» (2013: 115), provocando un proceso de «feminización
de la pobreza» (2013: 118). Al mismo
tiempo, esto ha promovido la rees-
tructuración global del trabajo reproductivo, reforzando «las jerarquías
inherentes a la división sexual del
trabajo» (2013: 118). Dicha reestructuración introduce una «división entre las mujeres que debilita la posibilidad de una solidaridad feminista
global y amenaza con reducir el feminismo a un mero vehículo para la
racionalización del orden económico mundial» (2013: 110), en consecuencia, se puede hablar hoy de una
crisis de las políticas feministas. A su
vez, «la proliferación de conflictos en
África, Asia y Oriente Medio» (2013:
128) muestran que los Programas de
Ajuste Estructural (PAE) perpetúan la
violencia y «la dependencia de dichos territorios con respecto al capital internacional» (2013: 129). Así
pues, la importancia de las mujeres
en la globalización se ve reflejada en
su papel clave dentro de dichos programas, y es que son ellas las que
protagonizan las luchas contra sus
efectos nocivos: «la privatización del
agua […] la deforestación y exportación de bosques enteros» (2013: 147148). También son las mujeres del
Sur las que «se han convertido en las
trabajadoras domésticas del Norte»
(2013: 147), permitiendo a los gobiernos «reducir la inversión en reproducción» (2013: 176), reducir su
responsabilidad para con el cuidado,
un tema de gran trascendencia social. Atendiendo a estos hechos, Federici concluye que la reflexión feminista se debe situar «en un marco
Índex
134
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
de trabajo anticapitalista» (2013:
125), pues la situación del Sur debe
suponer para las feministas del Norte
una toma de conciencia de cuál es el
enemigo común: el capitalismo.
En la tercera y última parte de la
obra, se trata la reproducción de lo
común, donde Federici destaca las
luchas de las mujeres del Sur en defensa de la tierra, así como su protagonismo en la «persistencia de la
agricultura de subsistencia» (2013:
226). Dicha práctica supone ventajas
para las comunidades, porque «han
supuesto el principal parachoques
del mundo proletario frente a las
hambrunas provocadas por el régimen neoliberal» (2013: 233), debido
al desarrollo de un modelo sostenible de reproducción de la vida, más
allá de los flujos del capital. De esta
manera, el activismo femenino en
África, Latinoamérica y la India, ejemplifican el auge de movimientos que
se oponen a «la presión de las compañías agroalimentarias para reducir
las tierras de cultivo» (2013: 241),
compañías que expolian los recursos
naturales, lacrando el futuro de la
población. De esta realidad se desprende la idea de que la protección
de los bienes comunes debe ser la
misión central de cualquier movimiento social, que es necesario «proponer una gestión alternativa de los
bienes comunes, sometidos hoy a los
intereses del mercado» (Abad y Abad,
2014: 61). Al ser conscientes de esta
realidad, desde la perspectiva femiÍndex
nista existe la responsabilidad de reapropiarse dicho término, para configurar una propuesta en defensa de la
vida de corte anticapitalista (Pérez
Orozco, 2014), sobre todo, porque
como encargadas del cuidado y la
reproducción, «las mujeres han dependido en mayor manera que los
hombres del acceso a los recursos
comunes, y han estado más comprometidas con su defensa» (2013: 251).
Así, sin caer en un sesgo naturalista,
Federici propone reconocer la labor
de las mujeres en la «creación de formas colectivas de vida» (2013: 255)
para garantizar la reproducción social.
En definitiva, cuando en el Norte
del mundo emergen nuevos movimientos ciudadanos que reclaman
justicia, el activismo de las mujeres
del Sur en la protección de los recursos, así como su resistencia a plegarse frente al expolio del capital, debe
ser reconocida y incorporada en la
agenda política feminista. Al fin y al
cabo, el nuevo activismo ciudadano
en Occidente es el eco de las luchas
que llevan décadas realizándose en
los países del Sur. Desde nuestro
punto de vista, existen más puntos
en común que diferencias entre las
madres que protegen la tierra para
evitar la desposesión de la comunidad, y la ciudadanía que defiende a
su vecindad de un desalojo. La conexión no se puede obviar, por eso
una de las reflexiones más potentes
de Federici en su obra Revolución
135
Reseñas de libros
ECHEVERRIA, T. (2014): «Entrevista a
Silvia Federici», Boletín ECOS, 26,
pp. 1-11.
FEDERICI, S. (2010): Cajún y la bruja.
Mujeres, cuerpo y acumulación
originaria, Madrid, Traficantes de
Sueños.
LARRAÑAGA, M. y Y. JUBETO (2009): «¿Calma tras la tormenta financiera?
bIblIogRAfÍA
Reflexiones desde la perspectiva
de género», Lan Harremanak, 20ABAD, J. y M. ABAD (2014): «La economía
21, pp. 31-50.
social y solidaria como alternati- PÉREZ OROZCO, A. (2014): Subversión
feminista de la economía. Aporva económica. Bienes comunes y
tes para un debate sobre el condemocracia», Recerca. Revista de
flicto capital-vida, Madrid, TrafiPensament i Anàlisi, 14, pp. 55cantes de Sueños.
75. [http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/
SALAZAR, O. (2012): «Otras masculinidaRecerca15.3].
des posibles: Hacia una humanidad
CARRASCO, C. (2009): «Mujeres, sostediferente y diferenciada», Recerca.
nibilidad y deuda social», Revista
Revista de Pensament i Anàlide Educación, n.º extraordinario,
si, 12, pp. 87-112. [http://dx.doi.
org/10.6035/Recerca.2012.12.6].
pp.169-191.
en punto cero. Trabajo doméstico,
reproducción y luchas feministas,
es que no se puede trabajar por la
igualdad entre mujeres y hombres si
no se lucha antes contra las estructuras capitalistas.
Índex
136
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
Andrés Piqueras Infante (2014): La opción reformista: entre el despotismo y la revolución,
madrid, Anthropos, 2014. Reseñado por Albert noguera fernández, universitat de
valència. Reseña recibida: 3 julio 2015. Reseña aceptada: 8 julio 2015.
El reformismo o la socialdemocracia es una estrategia de transformación de la sociedad que pretende
usar el Estado como instrumento de
intervención en el mercado para
mejorar las condiciones de vida de
la población. Persigue la regulación
del mercado y la prestación de derechos y servicios desde y por el Estado, así, el Estado es el sujeto de las
políticas y la sociedad el objeto de
las mismas. Ahora bien, la estrategia
reformista o socialdemócrata no es
ajena a la coyuntura histórico-concreta en la que opera, esta no puede
considerarse como «algo» que puede
ser utilizado por «cualquiera» cuando «quiera». No es una estrategia que
se mantenga a lo largo del tiempo a
la espera de que alguien la use. De
acuerdo con esta concepción, el
acontecimiento fruto de las elecciones de un simple cambio de tendencia progresista en las personas que
ocupan las estructuras de Estado
debería permitir volver a activar la
estrategia reformista en la coyuntura
actual. El libro de Andrés Piqueras,
La opción reformista: entre el despotismo y la revolución, demuestra
de manera brillante que esto no es
así. La estrategia reformista o socialdemócrata, como cualquier otra estrategia de acción política, aparece
Índex
como parte integrada de una «época» o de una configuración social
histórica en cuyo interior adquiere
eficacia. Fuera de su «época» una estrategia no es útil ni eficaz. Toda estrategia de acción política surge
fruto de una coyuntura y opera en
interrelación con ella de manera que
su modificación altera también la
eficacia de la estrategia.
La viabilidad y eficacia de la opción reformista dependerá, señala el
autor, de que en una determinada
formación socio-estatal se den tres
factores (el subyacente, el activante
y el precipitante):
- El primero (factor subyacente)
hace referencia a la capacidad de
impulsar y mantener el crecimiento, capaz a su vez, de posibilitar
un aceptable consumo de masas.
Como señala el autor, esto permite seguir manteniendo la plusvalía por encima de los costes de
producción, y además, gracias al
incremento general del poder adquisitivo y de los niveles de vida,
vender más fácilmente y en más
cantidad los productos para transformar aquella plusvalía en beneficio. En este escenario, aunque se
mantengan inalteradas las desiguales proporciones del reparto
137
Reseñas de libros
de la producción total asignadas
al Capital y las asignadas al Trabajo, en tanto la producción aumenta, la masa de bienes destinadas a
este último aumenta también materialmente sin que ello suponga
menoscabo alguno para los beneficios del capital ni las relaciones
productivas establecidas, permitiendo al Trabajo negociar y conseguir un aumento de los salarios
directos, indirectos (prestaciones
y servicios sociales) y diferidos
(pensiones) de los trabajadores.
- El segundo (factor activante) hace
referencia a la limitación de la capacidad de reemplazo de la fuerza
de trabajo por el Capital. El desarrollo de la industrialización implica un aumento de la necesidad
de asalarización, lo que supone
que la mayor parte de la población activa queda directa o
indirectamente bajo la forma salario agotando o reduciendo el ejército industrial de reserva. Ello aumenta significativamente las
posibilidades de negociación y
presión de la opción socialdemócrata.
- Y el tercero (factor precipitante)
a la capacidad agencial del Trabajo, estrechamente vinculada a su
fortaleza organizativa. De manera
que las fuerzas del Trabajo sean
capaces de aprovechar en su propio beneficio una correlación de
fuerzas objetivamente favorable.
Este factor viene fuertemente determinado por los otros dos.
Solo cuando se dan estas tres condiciones existen posibilidades de
afianzamiento y mantenimiento de la
opción socialdemócrata como estrategia generadora de progreso social.
Cuando ellas no se dan, el capitalismo histórico se ha decantado siempre por la opción liberal generadora
de pobreza y desigualdad. A partir de
esta tesis, el libro lleva a cabo un estudio de las distintas fases que ha
atravesado el capitalismo histórico,
de sus regímenes de acumulación y
modos de regulación del orden social, de sus bases energéticas, sus
crisis y mutaciones y las formas de
dominación resultantes, desde finales del s. XVIII hasta hoy en día.
Piqueras diferencia entre distintas
fases que define como: el capitalismo de libre competencia (de finales
del s. XVIII hasta mediados de la última década del s. XIX), el capitalismo
monopolista corporativo (de mediados de la última década del s. XIX
hasta la IIGM), el capitalismo monopolista de estado (de la segunda posguerra mundial hasta la década de
los 80 del s. XX), el capitalismo monopolista transnacional (de la década de
los 80 del s. XX hasta un poco antes de
la actualidad) y el impasse actual.
En su análisis de las fases del capitalismo, el autor explica cómo es
después de la segunda posguerra
mundial, en el llamado capitalismo
Índex
138
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
monopolista de estado, donde se dan
los tres factores descritos (el subyacente, el activante y el precipitante),
siendo los años 50, 60 y 70, las tres
décadas doradas de la opción reformista. Al terminar la SGM se da en Europa una coyuntura histórica de destrucción del Capital y, por tanto, la
necesidad de este de iniciar un proceso de acumulación inmediata. Para
ello se requería paz social y crecimiento económico.
Por un lado, el apaciguamiento
del conflicto se lleva a cabo mediante el reconocimiento del Trabajo sociológico como actor político con
capacidad de intervenir en los procesos político-decisorios. La construcción de la democracia en la Europa
de posguerra no se hizo sobre un
conjunto de instrumentos participativos que actuaban como métrica de
la agregación de voluntades individuales (referéndums, consultas, etc.),
sino sobre un modelo neocorporativo basado en el reconocimiento del
trabajo como sujeto sociológico (libertad de sindicación y de creación
de nuevos partidos de masa, organizados a partir de los sindicatos), y el
reconocimiento de instrumentos de
acción específicos que permitían la
procedimentalización del conflicto
capital-trabajo en el interior del sistema (huelga, negociación colectiva y
otros derechos del conflicto social).
Ello permitía la integración del Trabajo dentro del sistema y la desactivación de la amenaza revolucionaria.
Índex
Por otro lado, y respecto al crecimiento económico, la ideología económica dominante en la época era el
keynesianismo, favorable a que el Estado jugara un papel activo en la recuperación económica mediante el
aumento de la productividad y de la
demanda.
El aumento de la productividad se
llevó a cabo a través de la inversión
de dinero público en capital constante (infraestructuras, transportes,
comunicaciones, investigación, etc.).
Inversiones que el capital privado no
hace por sí solo porqué está fuera de
la lógica del beneficio directo pero
que tiene especial importancia en
momentos de posguerra para favorecer el crecimiento. Y a través de llevar a cabo planes de reestructuración de sectores económicos y
estímulos a la fusión de capital que
acentuaron el proceso de concentración y monopolización. La creación
de grandes empresas con cientos de
trabajadores aumentó la producción,
primero porqué permite insertar
competitivamente la economía estatal en la economía mundial, y segundo porqué permite al Estado convertirse en cliente de ellas mediante
contratos públicos. La gran empresa
es la única en condiciones de satisfacer la gran demanda del Estado.
El aumento de la demanda, de
acuerdo con la tesis keynesiana que
invierte la ley de Say y afirma que no
es la producción la que determina la
demanda sino a la inversa, se consi-
139
Reseñas de libros
guió mediante una manipulación de
la economía por parte del Estado
con el fin de aumentar la demanda.
Ello se logró a través de una determinada política monetaria, a través de
la carrera armamentística de la guerra fría que convirtió el Estado en un
gran comprador de armamento, o a
través del aumento de salarios siguiendo el ejemplo de Henry Ford
de incrementar la retribución a los
trabajadores de su fábrica automovilística para que pudieran convertirse
en cliente de la misma.
A esta política concreta en el ámbito económico (intervención del
Estado para aumentar la productividad y la demanda) propia del capitalismo industrial de pleno empleo de
la segunda posguerra mundial, le correspondió una política concreta en
el ámbito social que pasó por el reconocimiento de derechos y prestaciones sociales. La incorporación de
los derechos sociales en el constitucionalismo europeo de posguerra se
dirigió al cumplimiento de la citada
doble función del Estado en la economía. En primer lugar, conseguir
aumentar la producción. La asunción
por parte del Estado del coste y garantía de derechos como la educación, la sanidad, vivienda, etc., no es
más que una contribución del Estado
para costear la producción y reproducción de la fuerza de trabajo. Toda
la enseñanza o formación pública de
una fuerza de trabajo que prestará
después sus servicios en la empresa
privada supone tanto una transferencia de recursos como una contribución importantísima, en la medida
que se necesita mano de obra cada
vez más cualificada para propiciar
un aumento de la productividad. Se
socializan los costes del trabajo mientras que se privatiza la producción.
En segundo lugar, conseguir aumentar la demanda. Las prestaciones o
servicios sociales era una manera de
añadir a la forma salario directo, la
forma salario indirecto (salario en
«especies»), mediante el que se completaban los ingresos del Trabajo con
el objetivo de generar un aumento
del excedente salarial que, a la vez,
generaba un aumento de la demanda
o consumo.
En este escenario de capitalismo
industrial de pleno empleo los factores subyacente, activante y precipitante se daban plenamente permitiendo a la opción reformista operar
eficazmente para la generación de
progreso social. Sin embargo, la crisis
económica mundial de los años 70,
cuyo momento simbólico de inicio
es la crisis del petróleo de octubre
de 1973, implicó el inicio de una
fuerte depresión económica a la que
los grandes capitales hicieron frente
a través de lo que el autor llama una
estrategia de triple desplazamiento:
- La fusión entre empresas y el surgimiento de las empresas transnacionales que provocan un desplazamiento espacial del capital
Índex
140
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
hacia las periferias del sistema
donde los costes de producción
eran más baratos, lo que implica
la eliminación de muchos puestos
de trabajo en el centro europeo.
- Un desplazamiento hacia nueva
líneas de producción o sectores
de actividad. Al desplazar la actividad industrial hacia la periferia, la
economía en los países centrales
se reorienta hacia nuevos sectores muy especializados y con un
fuerte desarrollo tecnológico
(biogenética, robótica, microelectrónica, etc.). Se trata de sectores
que requieren pocos trabajadores
y muy especializados.
- Un desplazamiento del capital
fuera de la producción, hacia la
especulación, la usura o las finanzas.
Ello condujo a la conformación
de una nueva fase de Capitalismo
Monopolista Transnacional, cuya expansión viene favorecida por el ciclo
de triunfos electorales de gobiernos
neoliberales (iniciado con la victoria
de Margaret Tatcher en el Reino Unido y Ronald Reagan en EE. UU.) y sus
políticas. La vieja sociedad fordista
donde el trabajador asalariado era el
sujeto de referencia es sustituida por
una nueva sociedad posfordista caracterizada por una multifragmanetación o multiactividad nómada de
múltiples formas de trabajo (autónomos no asalariados, precarios, desempleados, etc.). En este contexto no se
Índex
da ninguna de las condiciones necesarias para que la opción reformista
tenga ninguna capacidad para generar progreso social. No por casualidad es esta una época de fuertes recortes sociales y de deslegitimación
y crisis de los grandes partidos socialdemócratas y sus sindicatos desautorizados por su incapacidad de
mejorar las condiciones materiales
de vida de los trabajadores.
La vinculación de los derechos a
la forma trabajo-salario provoca que
cuando el salario deja de ser la forma general de retribución de las
relaciones de trabajo, una amplia
mayoría de la población queda excluida de los derechos. A la vez, al
cambiar la forma de organización
del trabajo, cambian también las
formas de conflicto y negociación
y, por tanto, de organización de los
trabajadores. La figura clásica del
sindicato y la huelga es, en la actualidad, un instrumento válido de actuación en el ámbito estrictamente
industrial-laboral, pero incapaz de
abarcar la amplitud y complejidad
del nuevo espacio de actuación, «lo
social», y sus múltiples formas de
trabajo. Los desempleados o el trabajo autónomo precario de subsistencia, al carecer de una contraparte colectiva, ha salido de facto de la
historia secular de conflictos laborales y del sistema de derechos
construido a partir de la legitimidad
de esos conflictos.
141
Reseñas de libros
A partir de 2008 nos encontramos ante una nueva crisis del modelo de capitalismo y de su superestructura político-ideológica. Frente a
ello, están apareciendo nuevas formaciones políticas que defienden y
apuestan por el reformismo como
estrategia o solución a la precarización general de las condiciones materiales de vida de amplias capas sociales. Sin embargo, ¿ofrece la opción
reformista alguna posibilidad de éxito en la coyuntura actual?
El libro pone de manifiesto cómo
la historia de las grandes crisis nos
ha enseñado que una vez superadas
estas nunca se vuelve atrás hacia las
viejas formas de capitalismo. La
vuelta al capitalismo monopolista
de Estado, época dorada de la opción reformista, resulta imposible.
Nuevas formas de capitalismo desencadenan una nueva fase del capital, nuevas formas de gestionar la
mediación social del valor, de conseguir la reproducción de la fuerza de
trabajo y, en general, nuevas relaciones Capital/Trabajo. Después de
cada gran crisis ha surgido un capitalismo nuevo.
No resulta posible establecer detalladamente cómo será el capitalismo de las próximas décadas, lo que
no hay duda es que estamos en una
etapa de transición y que, tal como
señala Piqueras, el capitalismo actual
se caracteriza por:
- Una pérdida de capacidad para
impulsar y mantener el crecimiento.
- Dificultades para encontrar un
nuevo motor de acumulación. No
hay hoy una rama económica
como fue el ferrocarril en el s. XIX
o la industria automotriz en el s.
XX, capaz de teñir todas las demás
y llevarlas hacia adelante.
- Una decreciente capacidad de
conversión del dinero en capital.
El estallido de la burbuja inmobiliaria implica que sea cada vez
más difícil para los agentes financieros derivar la gran cantidad de
capital ficticio hacia sectores económicos reales.
- Una decreciente capacidad de
asalarización o de generación de
empleo.
- El agotamiento de las fuentes
energéticas básicas para cualquier
modelo de producción industrial.
Ello imposibilita la conformación
de los tres factores (subyacentes, activante y precipitante) necesarios
para que la opción reformista pueda
operar y ser útil en los próximos
años para la mejora de nuestras condiciones de vida. En consecuencia,
difícilmente la opción socialdemócrata puede ser una alternativa para
salir de esta crisis con una sociedad
más justa e igualitaria. Descartada
esta opción, y tal como concluye el
autor del libro, el declive de la civilización industrial-fordista irá obliganÍndex
142
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
do a establecer, en cualquier caso,
formas de vida apegadas a lo local,
con producción y consumo más o
menos autosuficiente y autocentrados. Este declive ofrece, por tanto,
perspectivas objetivas para la exis-
Índex
tencia de otros modos de producción. Para ello, la renovada dinámica
de clases que suscita la propia degeneración capitalista abre una nueva
etapa esperanzadora en la senda de
la emancipación humana.
143
Reseñas de libros
Joan Subirats, mayo fuster, Rubén martínez, marco berlinguer y Jorge luis
Salcedo (2014): Jóvenes, Internet y política, madrid, Centro Reina Sofía sobre Adolescencia y Juventud fundación de Ayuda contra la Drogadicción (fad). Reseñado por
luis vives martín, universitat Jaume I. Reseña recibida: 5 junio 2015. Reseña aceptada: 2 julio 2015.
Jóvenes, Internet y política es un
trabajo de investigación en el cual se
explora la relación entre los siguientes tres elementos: 1) los jóvenes
como grupo social protagonista, 2)
internet como nuevo espacio de actuación y 3) la política como ejercicio de las acciones colectivas implicadas en relaciones de poder. Si bien
existían numerosos estudios sobre
estos tres factores, lo interesante de
este trabajo es que aquí se estudian
de manera relacionada, dando pie a
extraer conclusiones interesantes y
novedosas. La comprensión que hasta la fecha se tenía de estos factores
–juventud, participación y política–
parece que está cambiando.Tal como
señala Subirats en la introducción
«Desde el 15-M [...] nadie que quiera
saber cómo está funcionando el escenario político en España puede
desconocer el fenómeno de las redes
sociales y sus efectos en el sistema
político» (Subirats, 2014: 6). Los autores de este trabajo ahondan en esta
cuestión desde un estudio pormenorizado de publicaciones recientes de
los campos de la filosofía y la ciencia
política.
El trabajo se estructura en un total de cuatro capítulos. En el primer
capítulo Marc Parés desglosa el trinomio juventud, política y participación, realizando una aproximación
histórica a dichos términos. Esto permite observar cómo los nuevos estudios sobre estos tres factores ofrecen nuevas respuestas y abren un
nuevo horizonte de posibilidades. En
el caso de la juventud, según las teorías contractualistas, esta deja de ser
una etapa estrictamente delimitada
por el factor referido a la edad de los
individuos, ahora sus límites son difusos y dependen mucho del contexto en el que se encuentre el sujeto.
La definición de política se amplía
hasta el punto de comprender su
ejercicio como gobierno de lo común, ya sea desde las instancias oficiales o al margen de las mismas. Con
la participación ocurre lo mismo,
definiciones más extensivas abandonan los antiguos estudios, centrados
únicamente en la acción del voto, de
forma que las últimas definiciones
de la participación reconocen distintas formas de ejercer la acción política que van más allá de las urnas.
Seguidamente, Parés se centra detalladamente en el papel que juegan
los jóvenes respecto a la participación política. Para ello recoge estuÍndex
144
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
dios tanto desde un enfoque más
positivista, como otros más constructivistas. Las conclusiones a las que
llega demuestran que lo que en otras
ocasiones se había sostenido, es decir, la desafección y apatía juvenil
hacia la política, parece que es más
bien desafección hacia la política
institucional, o una actitud de insatisfacción más que desafección, y así lo
revelan estudios como el de Benedicto o el de Soler que el propio autor
cita en su artículo (Parés, 2014: 24)
Estudios que muestran cómo los jóvenes se ven más atraídos hacia formas políticas no institucionalizadas
como pudiera ser el caso de la participación en los movimientos sociales. Finalmente, para cerrar el capítulo, Parés menciona incipientes
estudios referidos a internet y sus
nuevas herramientas como son los
nuevos espacios web wiki o 2.0, los
cuales podrían traducirse en mecanismo de movilización de los jóvenes hacia la participación política.
Aun así, el propio autor advierte que
es demasiado pronto para evaluar
esta tendencia, pues los estudios realizados hasta la fecha no revelan resultados concluyentes.
El segundo capítulo, titulado «Desconfiados: suspendidos entre búsqueda, resignación y revuelta. Una
situación inestable» es obra de Marco Berlinguer y Rubén Martínez Moreno. Se trata de un informe que recoge las ideas principales surgidas
de 4 focus groups realizadas en MaÍndex
drid y Barcelona a jóvenes de entre
18 y 25 años. Entre las principales
afirmaciones que realizan estos autores, destaca su defensa de dos factores claves en la alteración de la relación entre jóvenes y política, estos
son: la crisis económica y la nueva
esfera pública en red. La primera parece llevar a una politización guiada
por la necesidad, ya que son factores
como la educación y el paro los que
más preocupan a los jóvenes. Así, lejos de una pasión vocacional se acercan a la política por la necesidad de
encontrar solución a los problemas
que les atañen directamente. En
cuanto al segundo factor, el referido
a la nueva esfera pública digital, es
considerado como el elemento central de conformación de la que denominan generación post 15-M. La nueva esfera digital, se convierte en el
lugar predilecto de las jóvenes generaciones para comunicar, informarse,
relacionarse y, en definitiva, empoderarse.
Las conclusiones que presentan
estos autores en su informe en torno
a la juventud y la participación política se resumen en cuatro puntos:
1) Esta generación está más politizada que la anterior y tiene una
actitud más crítica.
2) A pesar de que los jóvenes asistentes en los focus groups muestran su descontento con el sistema democrático actual no
renuncian a la democracia, sino
145
Reseñas de libros
que oscilan entre un modelo
democrático más participativo,
pero a su vez más meritocrático.
3) Aunque los jóvenes reconocen
la potencialidad de la nueva esfera pública digital, dudan de la
fiabilidad de las nuevas fuentes
de información así como lo hacían de las clásicas.
4) Aseguran que la nueva esfera digital difumina los límites entre
lo público y lo privado. Debatiéndose además entre la funcionalidad de las formas colectivas de acción o, por el contrario,
la salvaguarda del interés individual.
El tercer capítulo, escrito por
Rubén Martínez Moreno, lleva por
título «Internet y política (versión
1.0). Política para la Red, política con
la Red, política desde la Red». En él
ocupa un lugar central el estudio de
la Red como elemento impulsor del
cambio político. El autor se pregunta
primero por qué política de funcionamiento tiene internet, para posteriormente advertir de los tres posibles tipos de transformación política
que se derivan de internet. Estos tres
procesos son, según el autor, los siguientes: 1) la política para la red, es
decir, incidir en espacios donde la
propia red es el espacio afectado; 2)
la política con la red, como herramienta para mejorar el sistema o
instituciones ya existentes; 3) la política desde la red o también llamada
«tecnopolítica», un espacio donde
surgen nuevas formas de organización. Martínez Moreno asegura que
la red, en todas sus dimensiones, es
un instrumento que sirve para mejorar la democracia. Ahora bien, considera que la política desde la red, o
esta nueva dimensión conocida
como «tecnopolítica», es la más innovadora, puesto que convierte la red
en algo más que una herramienta
para hacer política, la transforma en
una nueva forma de hacer política.
La «tecnopolítica» corrige así fallas
de la democracia representativa al
uso y acerca a formas democráticas
permanentes, con mayores posibilidades de participación, cualitativa y
cuantitativamente. La política desde
la Red, es aplicable además a distintos niveles, tanto a partidos políticos
para facilitar su apertura (deliberación, participación en la toma de
decisiones, mayor capacidad de adaptación al ciberactivismo), a gobiernos con el fin de aumentar la participación y la transparencia,o a prácticas
ciudadanas como ya se están dando
(sería el caso de Civio, Red Ciudadana. Partido X, etc.).
Para cerrar el capítulo, el autor
aplica la dialéctica hegeliana al mundo digital, presentando una tesis, una
antítesis y una síntesis final de lo que
puede deparar la red en los procesos
de transformación política. Para Martínez Moreno, la tesis es que la red
permitirá impulsar nuevas formas organizativas y de comunicación, dando
Índex
146
RECERCA · DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.7 · ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 129-147
pie a nuevas formas institucionales.
Por su parte, como antítesis presenta
posturas que difieren de dicho optimismo tecnopolítico. El «solucionismo» declara que este no produce más
que ilusiones que no se corresponden de facto con el cambio que desde
hace tiempo se augura. Mientras tanto,
el «ciberfetichismo» considera que la
red no permite una socialización densa. Para Martínez Moreno, la respuesta
final o la síntesis desemboca en «la
Red como producción cultural, como
un ensamblaje de tecnologías, sujetos,
rumbos culturales y usos que pueden
presentar una amalgama de formas de
hacer política» (2014: 90). Y precisamente en esa vasta red hay espacio
para el diálogo entre la red como forma que abre nuevas posibilidades a la
democracia y las críticas al ciberfetichismo o el solucionismo. Así, se puede entender la red como espacio de
conflicto (y por ende político) para
reinventar la democracia.
El cuarto capítulo, titulado «Juventud y participación política en la era
digital: estado del arte versus arte del
estado», lo firma Carlos Feixa. El texto tiene como objetivo analizar las
formas de participación política en
internet de los jóvenes. Para este propósito el autor referencia una serie
de estudios clásicos que demuestran
cómo la juventud tiene una participación activa en la política, aunque
esta provenga de vías no tradicionales. En concreto, destaca el papel de
los movimientos sociales como lugar
Índex
donde los jóvenes se sienten más
identificados políticamente. Esto le
proporciona las bases para analizar
exhaustivamente y más concretamente lo que llama movimientos juveniles, dividiéndolos cronológicamente por «la generación digital o @»
y «la generación hiperdigital o #». Si
bien parece ser que la generación
digital sería aquella que siendo jóvenes se desenvuelven en la era digital
(internet de 1.ª generación, móviles,
dispositivos electrónicos, etc.), en
estos momentos a los jóvenes se les
consideraría ya generación hiperdigital, de las redes y la web social. A la
ruptura generacional marcada por la
revolución tecnológica que da nombre a la generación digital, le seguiría
ahora una generación hiperdigital,
caracterizada por el uso de las webs
2.0., las redes sociales, e incluso una
participación política rizomática, refiriéndose así a la descentralización
de los movimientos de protesta derivados del 15-M, que crecen indefinidamente y que emiten nuevas raíces
de sus propios nudos. Freixa analiza
minuciosamente esta generación y la
compara con la anterior, proponiendo como colofón un estudio de caso
como el de la generación indignada.
Los rasgos más destacables de esta
generación son: el hiperdigitalismo,
la temporalidad viral, una comprensión glocal del espacio o translocal y,
como ya se ha comentado, una reproducción política en forma de rizoma. Características que según el
147
Reseñas de libros
autor proyectan un cambio si no de
época, sí de generación.
Cierra este estudio de Jóvenes,
Internet y política un anexo con dos
trabajos referidos a la investigación
en red, ambos de un corte más metodológico y técnico. Uno se titula
«Métodos de investigación en Red» y
está escrito por Jorge Luis Salcedo y
Mayo Fuster Morell, y el otro titulado
«Investigación colaborativa, divertida, barata, transmedia. Otras formas
de entender la investigación», escrito
por Pablo Rey Mazón y Alfonso Sánchez Uzábal.
En lo que se refiere al conjunto
general de esta obra, se puede afirmar que recoge los estudios de la
implicación juvenil en la participación política, aportando una nueva
visión respecto a un tema central
como el de la desafección juvenil
hacia la misma y demostrando con
numerosas referencias que son posibles otras interpretaciones. Coinciden todos los trabajos que componen la obra en que el interés político
de los jóvenes lejos de acercarse a las
clásicas formas de participación, se
traduce en nuevas formas de activismo político como las mareas y los
movimiento sociales, y se desplaza a
nuevos espacios en los que la nueva
esfera pública digital ocupa un lugar
central. Los cambios que la red ha
generado en el trinomio política-jóvenes-participación es un hecho que
a la luz de estos estudios no se puede
obviar, todavía es difícil hacerse una
idea del lugar hacia el cual nos llevan, ahora bien, lo que parece cierto
es que el escenario político está cambiando, ahora dependerá de las nuevas generaciones de jóvenes el lugar
hacia donde nos lleve el camino.
Índex
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 17. 2015. ISSN: 1130-6149 – pp. 149-151
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/Recerca.2015.17.8
breves currículums de los autores y autoras
fRED PowEll
Catedrático de Applied Social Studies en la University College Cork, Irlanda. Ha sido
profesor invitado en Gran Bretaña, Italia, Portugal, China y Francia. Entre sus numerosas
publicaciones destacan (junto a M. Scanlon) Dark Secrets of Childhood: Media Power,
Child Abuse and Public Scandals (Policy Press, 2015); (junto a Halton y Scanlon) Continuing Professional Development in Social Work (Policy Press, 2013); The Politics of
Civil Society: Big Society and small government (Policy Press, 2013); The Politics
of Civil Society: Neoliberalism or Social Left? (Policy Press, 2007); The Politics of Social
Work (Sage, 2001). Sus intereses de investigación incluyen sociedad civil, infancia y juventud, democracia participativa y ciudadanía.
AngElA bouRnE
Profesora en la Universidad de Roskilde, Dinamarca. Entre sus publicaciones se
incluyen obras como The EU and the Accommodation of Basque Difference in
Spain (Manchester University Press, 2008) y la edición de libros como (junto a Michelle Cini) European Union Studies (Palgrave, 2006) y The EU and Territorial
Politics Within Member States: Conflict or Co-operation? (Brill, 2006). También ha
publicado numerosos artículos en revistas de investigación como Journal of Common Market Studies, Democratization, Comparative European Politics, Regional
and Federal Studies, International Journal of Public Administration y The Comparative Law Journal. Además de trabajar en temas como la europeización y los
movimientos sociales, Bourne tiene actualmente un contrato con Routledge para
escribir un libro bajo el título Democratic Dilemmas: Why democracies ban political parties.
SEvAStI ChAtzoPoulou
Profesora de Políticas y Leyes de la Unión Europea en el Departamento de Sociedad y Globalización de la Universidad de Roskilde, Dinamarca. Sus intereses de investigación se centran en la europeización de los movimientos sociales, así como la
europeización de la administración pública y de las políticas de regulación. Por otra
parte, su trabajo examina el papel de la UE como actor transnacional de gestión regulatoria y de gestión de crisis. Ha publicado en revistas de investigación tales como
International Journal of Public Administration; Perspectives on European Politics and Society y British Food Journal. Asimismo, ha publicado varios capítulos de
Índex
150
RECERCA, REVISTA DE PENSAMENT I ANÀLISI, NÚM. 15. 2014. ISSN: 1130-6149 - pp. 149-151
libro dentro de la editorial Routledge. Actualmente está finalizando un monográfico
sobre la europeización de las administraciones públicas nacionales.
AgnESE SAmPIEtRo
Es doctoranda en Lingüistica en el Departamento de Teoría de los Lenguajes y
Ciencia de la Comunicación de la Universitat de València. Sus áreas de investigación principales son la comunicación a través de las nuevas tecnologías y la participación en Internet. Ha sido investigadora visitante en la Universidad de Viena, ha
participado en diferentes congresos internacionales y en dos proyectos de investigación a nivel nacional. Antes de incorporarse al Departamento de Teoría de los
Lenguajes y Ciencia de la Comunicación con una beca predoctoral de tres años
(2013-2016), ha trabajado como investigadora en el Instituto Polibienestar de la
Universitat de València.
lIDIA vAlERA oRDAz
Doctora en Comunicación en la Universitat de València (2014). Es licenciada en
Periodismo por Universitat de València (2009) y está a punto de acabar el Grado en
Ciencias Políticas (UNED). Sus intereses de investigación son la comunicación política,
la sociología de los medios de comunicación y las tecnologías digitales. Ha publicado artículos en revistas científicas, participado en numerosas conferencias y en dos
proyectos de investigación nacionales. Ha realizado estancias de investigación en las
universidades París 8, Boston College y Science Po. Actualmente es investigadora en
el Departamento de Teoría de los Lenguajes y Ciencia de la Comunicación de la
Universitat de València.
RobERt gonzálEz gARCÍA
Licenciado de Ciencias Políticas y de la Administración (1997) y de Sociología
(1999) por la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), donde también obtuvo el
grado de doctor en Ciencia Política y de la Administración (2011). Actualmente es
profesor-investigador a tiempo completo en el Área de Ciencia Política y Administración Pública del Instituto de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades de la Universidad
Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo. Es colaborador del Cuerpo Académico Estudios
Políticos Comparados y sus líneas de investigación son la participación ciudadana,
las políticas públicas, la juventud y los movimientos sociales.
SImon toRmEy
Catedrático de Teoría Política y director del Departamento de Ciencias Políticas
y Relaciones Internacionales en la Universidad de Sídney. Anteriormente ha sido
profesor en la Universidad de Leicester y en la Universidad de Nottingham. Es autor
de numerosos libros como Agnes Heller: Socialism, Autonomy and the Postmodern (Manchester University Press, 2001), Anti-Capitalism. A Beginner’s Guide’
(Oneworld, 2004 y 2013), Key Thinkers from Critical Theory to Post-Marxism (Sage,
2006) y The End of Representative Politics (Polity Press, 2015). Ha publicado artí-
Índex
151
Breves currículums de los autores y autoras
culos en revistas como Radical Philosophy, Thesis Eleven, The Journal of Political
Ideologies, Political Studies o Historical Materialism.
PAul DEkkER
Es director de la Unidad de Investigación “Participación y Gobierno” en The Netherlands Institute for Social Research / SCP (Países Bajos), así como profesor de Estudios de la Sociedad Civil en la Universiteit van Tilburg. Sus campos de investigación recientes son el sector sin ánimo de lucro, participación social y política,
opinión pública, democracia así como la sociedad y la política en los Países Bajos y
la Unión Europea. Es secretario de la International Society of Third Sector Research.
Es miembro del consejo editorial del Journal of Civil Society, Voluntas y Nonprofit
and Voluntary Sector Review. Entre sus publicaciones cabe destacar (junto a Taco
Brandsen y Adalbert Evers) Civicness in the governance and delivery of social
services (Nomos, 2010); (junto a Govert Buys y Marc Hooghe) Civil society: Tussen
oud en nieuw (Aksant, 2009); (junto a Loek Halman) The values of volunteering.
Cross-cultural perspectives (Plenum Publishers, 2003) y (junto a Eric M. Uslaner),
Social capital and participation in everyday life (Routledge, 2001).
RAmón A. fEEnStRA
Profesor del Departamento de Filosofía y Sociología de la Universitat Jaume I de
Castellón. Es licenciado en Publicidad y Relaciones Públicas (2005) y en Historia
(2013). En 2010 se doctoró en Filosofía Moral. Ha publicado los libros Democracia
monitorizada en la era de la nueva galaxia mediática (Icaria, 2012) y Ética de la
publicidad. Retos en la era digital (Dykinson, 2014). Ha publicado artículos en revistas como Media International Australia, Revista del Clad. Reforma y Democracia, Voluntas, The Journal of Civil Society o Policy Studies.
Índex
153
llAmADA PARA APoRtACIonES
revista de pensament i anàlisi
ISSN 1130-6149
ISSNe 2254-4135
Justicia social y Derechos humanos: el papel de la sociedad civil
Editores: Emilio Martínez Navarro (Universidad de Murcia) y Martha Rodríguez Coronel
(Universitat Jaume I de Castellón)
Periodo de envío artículos y reseñas: inaliza el 15 de enero de 2016
Publicación del número: octubre 2016
Idiomas: castellano, catalán e inglés
Instrucciones para autores: al visitar la página web http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.
php/recerca encontrarás las normas para publicar y una plantilla para artículos
más información sobre el número: al228496@uji.es
RECERCA es una revista semestral que se publica periódicamente durante los meses de
abril y octubre. Es una publicación basada en la revisión ciega por pares del Departamento de
Filosofía y Sociología de la universitat Jaume I de Castellón. Recerca pretende atraer artículos de primera calidad científica de investigadores nacionales e internacionales del campo de
la filosofía y de la sociología crítica. La revista está indexada en: Humanities Source Publications, Fuente Académica Premier, Philosopher´s Index, eRih-plus, cindoc (categoría B),
e-revist@s y Latindex.
Índex
154
CAll foR PAPERS
revista de pensament i anàlisi
ISSN 1130-6149
ISSNe 2254-4135
Social justice and human Rights: the role of civil society
Editors: Emilio Martínez Navarro (Murcia University) and Martha Rodríguez Coronel (Jaume I
University)
Deadline for the articles and reviews submission: January 15th 2016
Journal publication date: October 2016
languages: Spanish, English, Catalan
Author guidelines are on the journal’s website http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/
recerca
more information about the number: al228406@uji.es
RECERCA is a biannual journal that publishes periodically during the months of April and
October. Recerca is a blind peer review publication from the Department of Philosophy and
Sociology at the universitat Jaume I of Castellón (Spain). The journal aims to attract topquality articles in the fields of philosophy and critical sociology. The journal is indexed in:
Humanities Publications Source, Fuente Académica Premier, Philosopher’s Index, eRih-plus,
cindoc, e-revist@s and Latindex.
Índex
155
CAll foR PAPERS
revista de pensament i anàlisi
ISSN 1130-6149
ISSNe 2254-4135
Justícia social i drets humans: el paper de la societat civil
Editors: Emilio Martínez Navarro (Universidad de Murcia) i Martha Rodríguez Coronel
(Universitat Jaume I)
Període d’enviament: ins el 15 de gener de 2016
Publicació del número: octubre 2016
Idiomes: espanyol, anglès i català
Intruccions per als autors es troben a la pàgina web de la revista http://www.e-revistes.uji.
es/index.php/recerca
Per a més informació: al228496@uji.es
RECERCA és una publicació bianual es publica periòdicament durant els mesos d’abril i octubre. Està basada en la revisió cega per parells del Departament de Filosofia i Sociologia de
la universitat Jaume I de Castelló. Recerca pretén atreure articles de primera qualitat científica d’investigadors nacionals i internacionals del camp de la filosofia i de la sociologia crítica.
La revista està indexada en: Humanities Source Publications (ebsco), Fuente Académica Premier, Philosopher’s Index, eRih-plus, cindoc (categoria B), e-revist@s i Latindex.
Índex
Introducción
7
Activism and Civil Society: Broadening Participation and
Deepening Democracy
Paul Dekker and Ramón A. Feenstra, Tilburg University and
The Netherlands Institute for Social Research / Universitat Jaume I
Artículos
15
The Psych-Politics of Austerity; Democracy, Sovereignty and
Civic Protest
Fred Powell , University College Cork, Ireland
33
Europeanization and Social Movement Mobilization During the
European Sovereign debt Crisis: the Cases of Spain and Greece
Angela Bourne and Sevasti Chatzopoulou, Roskilde University, Denmark
61
17
Emotional Politics on Facebook. An Exploratory Study of
Podemos’ Discourse During the European Election
Campaign 2014
Agnese Sampietro and Lidia Valera Ordaz,
University of Valencia, Spain
85
El moviment per l’okupació i el moviment per l’habitatge:
semblances, diferències i confluències en temps de crisi
Robert González García, Universidad Autónoma del Estado
de Hidalgo, México
107
Democracy will Never be the Same Again: 21st Century Protest
and the Transformation of Politics
Simon Tormey, The University of Sydney, Australia
Reseñas de libros
129
132
136
La idea de la Justicia. Amartya Sen. Reseñado por Martha Rodríguez Coronel
Revolución en punto cero. Trabajo doméstico, reproducción y luchas
feministas. Silvia Federici. Reseñado por Maria Medina-Vicent
La opción reformista: entre el despotismo y la revolución.
Andrés Piqueras Infante. Reseñado por Albert Noguera Fernández
143
Jóvenes, Internet y Política. Equipo IGOPnet: Joan Subirats, Mayo Fuster,
Rubén Martínez, Marco Berlinguer y Jorge Luis Salcedo. Reseñado por Luis Vives
149
Breves currículums de los autores y autoras