1st Edition

Mobilizing during COVID-19 Social Movements in Times of Crisis

214 Pages
by Routledge

214 Pages
by Routledge

This book showcases cutting-edge research on protest and mobilization dynamics during the global COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic posed significant challenges for social movements while simultaneously triggering impactful mobilizations centered on the origins, policies, and politics of the pandemic. Through a rich analysis of social movement dynamics, the book offers insights into COVID-specific... Read more

Introduction: Mobilizing during COVID-19: social movements in times of crisis

Priska Daphi, Cristina Flesher Fominaya and Eduardo Romanos

 

1. ‘Institutions of governance are all corrupted’: anti-political collective identity of anti-lockdown protesters in digital and physical spaces

Ozge Ozduzen, Billur Aslan Ozgul and Bogdan Ianosev

 

2. Protesting the lockdown: geo-indexing a movement publicly opposing Covid-19 policies on Facebook

Dan Mercea, Michael Saker and Felipe G. Santos

 

3. Defending democracy against the ‘Corona dictatorship’? Far-right PEGIDA during the COVID-19 pandemic

Sabine Volk and Manès Weisskircher

 

4. Framing health and care: legacies and innovation during the pandemic

Donatella Della Porta and Anna Lavizzari

 

5. Mutual aid and solidarity politics in times of emergency: direct social action and temporality in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic

Lorenzo Zamponi

 

6. Re-thinking solidarity movements as infrastructure during the COVID-19 pandemic crisis: insights from Athens

Athina Arampatzi, Hara Kouki and Dimitris Pettas

 

7. Recasting solidarity during the COVID-19 pandemic: a case study

Aide Esu and Valeria Dessì

 

8. Did the pandemic spread populism? comparative study on the transformations of citizen movements in Chile and Hong Kong

Juan Enrique Serrano-Moreno and Susana Alejandra Osorio Solano

 

9. Protesting during the covid-19 pandemic in Turkey: when moral indignation and economic grievances outweigh risks of infection and repression

Basak Taraktas

 

10. ‘Vaccine passports equal Apartheid’: Covid-19 and parliamentary occupation in Aotearoa New Zealand

Thomas O’Brien and Nicholas Huntington

 

11. The compounded2 nature of the Covid pandemic on survivors of sexual violence

Melinda Chen

 

Biography

Cristina Flesher Fominaya is Professor of Global Studies at Aarhus University in Denmark. She is Editor in Chief of Social Movement Studies journal and a founding editor of Interface Journal. She has published widely on social movements, democracy, politics, and movement parties, including two monographs: Democracy Reloaded: Inside Spain’s Political laboratory from 15-M to Podemos (2020) and Social Movements in a Globalized World (2020) and several edited books.

Priska Daphi is Professor of Sociology at Giessen University, Germany and Editor-in-Chief of Social Movement Studies. Her research explores conflicts about globalization, migration, climate change and peace with a particular interest in social movements, civil society, and collective memory.

Eduardo Romanos is Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Sociology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM). He has previously worked as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Trento, as a Juan de la Cierva Fellow at the Universidad Pública de Navarra, and as a Ramón y Cajal Fellow at the UCM, Spain.