Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome
<span class="abs_content">This article analyses continuities and discontinuities across time in Italy in the use of direct social actions, defined as forms of action that focus upon directly transforming some specific aspects of society by means of the very action itself, instead of...
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doaj-403e4f5e2fbb4a7585c4e61c2d9516c52021-06-28T08:02:38ZengCoordinamento SIBAPartecipazione e Conflitto1972-76232035-66092015-07-018234336610.1285/i20356609v8i2p34314373Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and RomeClaudio Cattaneo0Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro1IERMB Institut de Estudis Regionals i Metropolitans de BarcelonaState University of New York at New Paltz<span class="abs_content">This article analyses continuities and discontinuities across time in Italy in the use of direct social actions, defined as forms of action that focus upon directly transforming some specific aspects of society by means of the very action itself, instead of claiming something from the state or other power holders. In doing this, this article offers two main illustrative hypotheses. First, that direct social actions represent a significant part of the repertoire of contention - at least in Italy - and that while they tend to be less visible than protest actions, they should still not be overlooked and treated like something “new” every time they resurface. Second, this article claims that the socio-economic context plays an important role in influencing the extended use of DSAs: if the supply of these forms of action by political actors is constant across time, what changes is the demand, that in times of economic hardship tends to characterise a broader constituency. We conclude by suggesting empirical methods to verify the hypothe-ses proposed, paving the way for future research on this topic.</span><br />http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/15157direct social actionresiliencerepertoires of contentionanti-austerity protesteconomic crisesitaly |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Claudio Cattaneo Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro |
spellingShingle |
Claudio Cattaneo Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome Partecipazione e Conflitto direct social action resilience repertoires of contention anti-austerity protest economic crises italy |
author_facet |
Claudio Cattaneo Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro |
author_sort |
Claudio Cattaneo |
title |
Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome |
title_short |
Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome |
title_full |
Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome |
title_fullStr |
Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome |
title_full_unstemmed |
Urban Squats as Eco-Social Resistance to and Resilience in the Face of Capitalist Relations: Case Studies from Barcelona and Rome |
title_sort |
urban squats as eco-social resistance to and resilience in the face of capitalist relations: case studies from barcelona and rome |
publisher |
Coordinamento SIBA |
series |
Partecipazione e Conflitto |
issn |
1972-7623 2035-6609 |
publishDate |
2015-07-01 |
description |
<span class="abs_content">This article analyses continuities and discontinuities across time in Italy in the use of direct social actions, defined as forms of action that focus upon directly transforming some specific aspects of society by means of the very action itself, instead of claiming something from the state or other power holders. In doing this, this article offers two main illustrative hypotheses. First, that direct social actions represent a significant part of the repertoire of contention - at least in Italy - and that while they tend to be less visible than protest actions, they should still not be overlooked and treated like something “new” every time they resurface. Second, this article claims that the socio-economic context plays an important role in influencing the extended use of DSAs: if the supply of these forms of action by political actors is constant across time, what changes is the demand, that in times of economic hardship tends to characterise a broader constituency. We conclude by suggesting empirical methods to verify the hypothe-ses proposed, paving the way for future research on this topic.</span><br /> |
topic |
direct social action resilience repertoires of contention anti-austerity protest economic crises italy |
url |
http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/15157 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT claudiocattaneo urbansquatsasecosocialresistancetoandresilienceinthefaceofcapitalistrelationscasestudiesfrombarcelonaandrome AT salvatoreengeldimauro urbansquatsasecosocialresistancetoandresilienceinthefaceofcapitalistrelationscasestudiesfrombarcelonaandrome |
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