Economic Crisis and Mass Protest

Höfundur Jon Gunnar Bernburg

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781138600126

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár 2016

7.390 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover Page
  • Half Title Page
  • Series Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Preface
  • 1 Introduction
  • The first days of the crisis
  • The emergence of protest
  • The unfolding crisis and the evolution of the protest
  • The significance of the Icelandic case: Iceland in global context
  • Aims of the book
  • Methods
  • Book outline
  • Notes
  • 2 Context of crisis
  • Breakdown theories: disruption of personal and social realities
  • Implications for the current study
  • Political process/opportunity: change in the political context
  • Political and discursive opportunities
  • Before the collapse: the historical context of the Icelandic financial crisis
  • State protectionism and constraints: Iceland through the 1980s
  • Globalization and invasion of free market logic: the 1990s
  • Capital liberation, “the Outvasion” (Útrásin), and debt accumulation: the 2000s
  • Success myths
  • Undercurrent of discontent
  • Warnings dismissed
  • After the collapse: convergence of quotidian disruption and credibility crisis
  • Disruption of the quotidian and the shared problematic present
  • From credibility crunch to foreign threat to legitimacy crisis
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 3 Evolution of protest
  • Studying the Icelandic financial crisis protests
  • Counting protesters and police: a methodological note
  • The emergence and expansion of protest, October and November 2008
  • Perceived efficacy and activist innovation
  • Waning participation, ongoing radicalization: December 2008
  • Threatening mass protest, January 2009
  • “The Pots and Pans Revolution”
  • Protest threat and government breakup
  • Protest participation and support among the general public: survey findings
  • Fading protest mobilization, February and March 2009
  • Summary: four phases of protest
  • Protest policing
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 4 Evolution of discourse
  • Framing as bounded (and strategic) innovation
  • Studying framing in the Icelandic setting
  • Neutralizing the crisis: the diagnostic framing of government leaders
  • Emergence of a challenging diagnosis
  • Political corruption
  • Unfettered neo-liberalism
  • Silencing
  • A victimized public
  • Lost credibility
  • Threat to sovereignty
  • Action framing
  • Prognostic framing: the formulation of shared (minimum) demands
  • Motivational framing
  • Framing through performance
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 5 Individual mobilization
  • Political, social, and economic incentives (and disincentives)
  • Indirect effects of frames through social and situational-emotional incentives
  • Economic loss, social comparisons, and relative deprivation
  • Biographical availability
  • Political incentives and protest behavior in the Icelandic setting
  • Exposure, illegitimacy, and (lack of) accountability
  • Blame
  • Political views and perception of opportunity
  • Motivational definitions
  • Social ties and protest incentives
  • Interpersonal “encouragement”
  • Social networks, communication networks, and social media
  • The protest site as a social attraction
  • Perceptions and emotions emerging at the protest site
  • Expectations and perceived efficacy
  • The lure of “magical moments”
  • Disagreement and protest spoilers
  • Self-image
  • Absolute and relative economic loss
  • Social and economic characteristics of protesters (and supporters)
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 6 Conclusion
  • The context of the financial Crisis: convergence of conditions conducive to protest
  • Implications
  • Agency, opportunity, and the dynamics of protest
  • Emergence of protest discourse: framing in political, cultural – and global – context
  • Individual mobilization: protest incentives in times of crisis
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Appendix A Grounded work
  • Discourse analysis
  • Semi-structured interviews
  • Appendix B Survey data
  • Reykjavík area social survey
  • Measurement
  • Methodological consideration: time of survey interview
  • Icelandic national voting study
  • Measurement
  • Appendix C Regression tables
  • References
  • Index
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