Protest Publics Toward a New Concept of Mass Civic Action /
| Corporate Author: | |
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| Other Authors: | , , |
| Summary: | XII, 306 p. 1 illus. text |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
2019.
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| Edition: | 1st ed. 2019. |
| Series: | Societies and Political Orders in Transition,
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05475-5 |
| Format: | Electronic Book |
Table of Contents:
- Self-Organized Publics in Mass Protests: An Introduction
- PART I: Dimensions of Protest Publics in the Recent Wave of Unrest
- Exploring Protest Publics: A New Conceptual Frame for Civil Participation Analysis
- Shoulder to Shoulder against Fascism: Publics in Gezi Protests
- Emergent Protest Publics in India and Bangladesh: A Comparative Study of Anti-Corruption and Shahbag Protests
- The Grammar of Protest Publics in Skopje, Macedonia, May 2015
- Retracing Public Protest in Portugal: A Generation in Trouble
- Justification in Protest Publics: The Homeless Workers’ Movement in Brazil’s Crisis
- So Strong, Yet So Weak: The Emergence of Protest Publics in Iceland in the Wake of the Financial Crisis
- Five Stars of Change: The Transformation of Italian Protest Publics into a Movement Party through Grillo’s Blog
- PART II: Protest Publics and Political Change in Different Political Regimes
- Cross-national Comparison of Protest Publics’ Roles as Drivers of Change: fromClusters to Models
- Protesters as the "Challengers of the Status-Quo" in Embedded Democracies: The Cases of Iceland, the United Kingdom and the United States
- Protest Publics as the “Watchdogs” of the Quality of Democracy in Global South
- Protest Publics as the Triggers of Political Changes in Hybrid Regimes: The Cases of Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt
- Protest Publics as Democratic Innovators in an Authoritarian Environment
- The Transforming Role of Protest Publics in Processes of Sociopolitical Change in the Global South and Southern Europe: From Occasional Challengers to Institutionalized Watchdogs
- Conclusion: The Common Features and Different Roles of Protest Publics in Political Contestation.