Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?

Today the second most important country after the United States, in the number of ecovillages, and by far, the most prominent in Europe, is Spain. The question to be addressed here is whether this revival or boom of ecovillages in Spain is an incipient social transformation and cultural change, foll...

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Main Author: Luis Del Romero Renau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2018.1468200
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spelling doaj-72c4e90ee0ad4adea03e18222e3e39be2021-03-18T16:21:41ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862018-01-014110.1080/23311886.2018.14682001468200Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?Luis Del Romero Renau0University of Valencia, Blasco Ibáñez AvToday the second most important country after the United States, in the number of ecovillages, and by far, the most prominent in Europe, is Spain. The question to be addressed here is whether this revival or boom of ecovillages in Spain is an incipient social transformation and cultural change, following Erik Olin Wright theory of emancipatory social transformation. This work is divided into five main sections. The first one introduces three different approaches that remark the importance of ecovillages for radical cultural and social studies. The second part explains the methodology performed for the study of 29 ecovillages in Spain, using six critical variables on material interests and ideology, following Wright’s concepts. The third section explored the set of arguments that are mobilized to support and create an ecovillage project in Spain, and its relationship with the neo-rural movement and grouped in two categories: ideology and material interests. The two final sections present some results on the analysis performed for 29 cases, and a discussion on social reproduction practices performed by ecovillages, dividing it between conventional and interstitial strategies, to contrast the discourse of ecovillages with Wright’s theory.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2018.1468200ecovillagesneo-ruralspainsocial transformationanarchism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luis Del Romero Renau
spellingShingle Luis Del Romero Renau
Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
Cogent Social Sciences
ecovillages
neo-rural
spain
social transformation
anarchism
author_facet Luis Del Romero Renau
author_sort Luis Del Romero Renau
title Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
title_short Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
title_full Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
title_fullStr Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
title_full_unstemmed Ecovillages in Spain: Searching an emancipatory social transformation?
title_sort ecovillages in spain: searching an emancipatory social transformation?
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Social Sciences
issn 2331-1886
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Today the second most important country after the United States, in the number of ecovillages, and by far, the most prominent in Europe, is Spain. The question to be addressed here is whether this revival or boom of ecovillages in Spain is an incipient social transformation and cultural change, following Erik Olin Wright theory of emancipatory social transformation. This work is divided into five main sections. The first one introduces three different approaches that remark the importance of ecovillages for radical cultural and social studies. The second part explains the methodology performed for the study of 29 ecovillages in Spain, using six critical variables on material interests and ideology, following Wright’s concepts. The third section explored the set of arguments that are mobilized to support and create an ecovillage project in Spain, and its relationship with the neo-rural movement and grouped in two categories: ideology and material interests. The two final sections present some results on the analysis performed for 29 cases, and a discussion on social reproduction practices performed by ecovillages, dividing it between conventional and interstitial strategies, to contrast the discourse of ecovillages with Wright’s theory.
topic ecovillages
neo-rural
spain
social transformation
anarchism
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2018.1468200
work_keys_str_mv AT luisdelromerorenau ecovillagesinspainsearchinganemancipatorysocialtransformation
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