1st Edition

Social Movements in Post-Communist Europe and Russia

Edited By Kerstin Jacobsson, Steven Saxonberg Copyright 2015
132 Pages
by Routledge

132 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

This volume provides a much needed update on the state of civil society in post-communist Europe and Russia more than two decades after the fall of the communist regimes. The chapters offer new perspectives on social movement strategies in post-communist Central-Eastern Europe and Russia. The chapters illustrate how social movements develop particular repertoires of action and contention, which... Read more

1. Introduction: A new look at social movements and civil society in post-communist Russia and Poland  2. Disciplining the ‘Second World’: The Relationship between Transnational and Local Forces in Contemporary Hungarian Women’s Social Movements  3. Does the EU help or hinder gay-rights movements in post-communist Europe? The case of Poland  4. Fragmentation of the collective action space: the animal rights movement in Poland  5. The diffusion of public interest mobilisation: a historical sociology perspective on advocates without members in the post-communist Czech Republic  6. Civil society and the state intertwined: the case of disability NGOs in Russia  7. State-sponsored civic associations in Russia: systemic integration or the ‘war of position’?

Biography

Kerstin Jacobsson publishes widely in the field of political sociology, including studies of social movements in Central and Eastern Europe. Her most recent book is Beyond NGO-ization: The Development of Social Movements in Central and Eastern Europe (edited with Steven Saxonberg, Ashgate, 2013).

Steven Saxonberg has published extensively about the collapse of communism and the development of post-communist social policies and social movements. His recent books are: Gendering Family Policies in Post-Communist Europe: A Historical-Institutional Analysis (Palgrave, forthcoming) and Transitions and Non-Transitions from Communism: Regime Survival in China, Cuba, North Korea, and Vietnam (Cambridge University Press, 2013).