Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators

<span class="abs_content">The European economic crisis has brought economic hardship and prolonged instability to many countries in the European Union. While economies are struggling to recover, citizens have opted to become more vocal unconventionally. Mass protest, public occupatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Francesca Vassallo, Pauline Ding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Coordinamento SIBA 2016-04-01
Series:Partecipazione e Conflitto
Subjects:
Online Access:http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/15894
id doaj-d8f2f6423f7941a582e97db85c88bb60
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d8f2f6423f7941a582e97db85c88bb602021-06-28T08:02:38ZengCoordinamento SIBAPartecipazione e Conflitto1972-76232035-66092016-04-019110112610.1285/i20356609v9i1p10114960Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic IndicatorsFrancesca Vassallo0Pauline Ding1University of Southern MaineAustralian National University<span class="abs_content">The European economic crisis has brought economic hardship and prolonged instability to many countries in the European Union. While economies are struggling to recover, citizens have opted to become more vocal unconventionally. Mass protest, public occupations and demonstrations have dominated Europe. Yet, numbers of people choosing to protest need to be assessed to verify whether the economic recession is indeed responsible for a surge in protest activism on the continent. With the use of multiple rounds from the European Social Survey (2006-2012), this article tests the hypothesis linking unconventional political behavior in Europe to the economy. Findings suggest that overall European protest levels are not higher after the crisis, although confrontational activism has spiked in few countries. Economic variables retain instead an important role in the explanation of protest in the post-recession era, with both objective and subjective economic measures supporting a grievance theory explanation of why Europeans protest. Economic decline matters in the selection of protest as a mode of political participation.</span><br />http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/15894economic crisiseuropean public opinioneuropean social surveygrievance theoryprotest
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca Vassallo
Pauline Ding
spellingShingle Francesca Vassallo
Pauline Ding
Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
Partecipazione e Conflitto
economic crisis
european public opinion
european social survey
grievance theory
protest
author_facet Francesca Vassallo
Pauline Ding
author_sort Francesca Vassallo
title Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
title_short Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
title_full Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
title_fullStr Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
title_full_unstemmed Explaining Protest in the Aftermath of the Great Recession in Europe: The Relevance of Different Economic Indicators
title_sort explaining protest in the aftermath of the great recession in europe: the relevance of different economic indicators
publisher Coordinamento SIBA
series Partecipazione e Conflitto
issn 1972-7623
2035-6609
publishDate 2016-04-01
description <span class="abs_content">The European economic crisis has brought economic hardship and prolonged instability to many countries in the European Union. While economies are struggling to recover, citizens have opted to become more vocal unconventionally. Mass protest, public occupations and demonstrations have dominated Europe. Yet, numbers of people choosing to protest need to be assessed to verify whether the economic recession is indeed responsible for a surge in protest activism on the continent. With the use of multiple rounds from the European Social Survey (2006-2012), this article tests the hypothesis linking unconventional political behavior in Europe to the economy. Findings suggest that overall European protest levels are not higher after the crisis, although confrontational activism has spiked in few countries. Economic variables retain instead an important role in the explanation of protest in the post-recession era, with both objective and subjective economic measures supporting a grievance theory explanation of why Europeans protest. Economic decline matters in the selection of protest as a mode of political participation.</span><br />
topic economic crisis
european public opinion
european social survey
grievance theory
protest
url http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/15894
work_keys_str_mv AT francescavassallo explainingprotestintheaftermathofthegreatrecessionineuropetherelevanceofdifferenteconomicindicators
AT paulineding explainingprotestintheaftermathofthegreatrecessionineuropetherelevanceofdifferenteconomicindicators
_version_ 1721356680403353600