05326oam 2200553 450 991079488350332120190911112724.01-78635-027-0(OCoLC)1008953894(MiFhGG)GVRL13XN(EXLCZ)99433000000001226620161006d2016 uy 0engurun|---uuuuardacontentrdamediardacarrierProtest, social movements, and global democracy since 2011 new perspectives /edited by Thomas Davies, Department of International Politics, City University of London, UK; Holly Eva Ryan, Crick Center, University of Sheffield, UK; Alejandro Milc�iades Pe�na, Department of Politics, University of York, UKFirst edition.United Kingdom :Emerald,2016.1 online resource (ix, 279 pages) color illustrations, color mapResearch in social movements, conflicts and change,0163-786X ;v. 39Description based upon print version of record.1-78635-028-9 Includes bibliographical references.Front Cover; Protest, Social Movements and Global Democracy since 2011: New Perspectives; Copyright Pages; Contents; List of Contributors; Foreword; Protest, Social Movements and Global Democracy since 2011: New Perspectives; Introduction; A New Protest Wave? An Overview of Key Events; Analyzing Protest and Democracy since 2011: Dimensions of the Debate; Dimensions of Protest; Dimensions of Democracy; Dimensions of the Relationship between Protest and Democracy; The Burgeoning Literature on the New "New Movements"; Contributions in This Special Issue; The Road Ahead; Notes; ReferencesDo Issues Matter? Anti-Austerity Protests' Composition, Values, and Action Repertoires ComparedIntroduction; Theory and Previous Research; Grievances, Deprivation, and Political Protest; The Evolution of Protest Participation; The Determinants of Protest Participation; The Importance of Issues; Data and Methods; Findings; Discussion and Conclusion; Acknowledgments; References; Appendix: Demonstrations Included in the Analysis: Coding Based on Expert Judgments; Occupying Organization: Space as Organizational Resource in Occupy Wall Street; Introduction; Social Movement Organizations and BeyondMethodsBeginnings; A Statement in Itself; Occupation as Recruitment; Building Commitment; Occupation as Connective Structure; Post-Eviction: The Loss of Organization; Discussion and Conclusion; Notes; References; Protest and Recognition in the Bulgarian Summer 2013 Movement; Introduction; Overview of Events in Bulgaria; Commonalities and Disparities with Global Protests; Identity and Memory in the Bulgarian Protests; Concluding Remarks; References; Challenging the Gospel of Neoliberalism? Civil Society Opposition to Mining in Armenia; MethodologyMining, Neoliberalism, and Civil Society ResistanceThe Governance Context and Neoliberal Mining-Friendly Policies; Opposition to Mining in Armenia: The Campaign to Save Teghut; Challenging the Gospel of Neoliberalism; Conclusion; Notes; Acknowledgments; References; Transnational Resistance Networks: New Democratic Prospects? The Lyon-Turin Railway and No TAV Movement; Introduction; Theoretical Framework; Democratic Participation and Communicative Action; Definition of Terms; Transnational Mega Projects, Social Movements, and Communicative Deficits; Communicative and Democratic DeficitsCase StudyResearch Method; Findings; Deliberative Democracy within the No TAV Movement; Communicative Action and "the Movement"; Communicative Distance between LTF and Local Citizens; Government Counter-Responses: Trust, Representative Democracy, and Conflicting Global Visions; Government Counter-Responses: Traditional Media Sources and New Media in the Public Sphere; No TAV and New Media; Transnational Resistance Networks and "Glocal" Prospects for Democratic Mobilization; Conclusion; Notes; ReferencesWhen Social Movements Become a Democratizing Force: The Political Impact of the Student Movement in ChileIn light of the limited achievements of the Arab Spring and other pro-democracy movements, volume 39 examines and unpacks arguments that these protests represent both a new phase and new prospects for democratic mobilization. The volume engages with new theoretical and methodological perspectives and illuminates novel aspects of transnational social movement dynamics, such as the evolving role of information technology, deterritorialisation and government counter-responses.Research in social movements, conflicts and change ;v. 39.Protest movements21st centurySocial movements21st centuryDemocracyProtest movementsSocial movementsDemocracy.322.42090512Davies Thomas RichardRyan Holly EvaPe�na Alejandro Milc�iadesMiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910794883503321Protest, social movements, and global democracy since 20113871000UNINA