Los Indignados: Tides of Social Insertion in Spain

Portada
John Hunt Publishing, 8 dic 2017 - 232 páginas
The emergent Indignados movement in Spain is transforming Spanish politics and society, heralding an end to the Transition since Franco, and responding to multiple legitimation crises in Spain and in Europe. This movement is rooted in the Stop Evictions campaign led by Ada Colau in Barcelona following the bursting of the subprime mortgage bubble in the wake of the 2008; as well as the 15-M Movement arising in May 2011 Puerta del Sol of Madrid, symbolizing the Indignez-Vous outrage of a lost generation.
 

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Índice

Introduction and Acknowledgments
Spanish Political Parties a soup of acronyms
Tides of Social Insertion
Timeline of Tides of Social Insertion and Confluence
MistrustSuspicionBetrayal and the Provenance of Normativity
Confluence toward Contesting the Transition State
Recalling André Gorz
Excursus on Political Corruption and Cronyism in Spain
Indignation as AntiAusterityAnti Neoliberalism Movements
Podemosand Then On to Barcelona en Comú
The Local Elections in May 2015
Moving into 2016
From Prefigurative Movement to Confluence and 14 From Prefigurative Movement to Confluence and Electoral
A Movement Left Party
Afterword by Ramón Contarelo
References

The Outraged Grandchildren of the Second Embourgeoisement
Chronicle of an Explosion Foreseen by Public Opinion
Rhizomic Social Movements of Indignation

Términos y frases comunes

Sobre el autor (2017)

RICHARD R. WEINER [PhD Columbia] is Professor of Political Science at Rhode Island College & Local Affiliate, Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard University.

IVAN LOPEZ (PhD Universidad Carlos III Madrid) is a Researcher and Assistant Professor at Universidad de Zaragoza (Spain) - Faculty of Social Sciences and Work. Since the economic crisis of 2008, he has been studying citizens’ and political parties' responses to underlying social and political changes.

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