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Globalization from Below
Transnational Activists and Protest Networks
Donatella della Porta, Massimiliano Andretta, Lorenzo Mosca and Herbert Reiter
$25.00 Paper
ISBN: 0-8166-4643-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4643-2
An in-depth look at the Genoa G8 summit and the European Social Forum, from the protesters’ point of view.
When violence broke out at the demonstrations surrounding the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa, Italy, the authors of this book were there. The protests proved to be a critical moment in the global justice movement.
Presenting the first systematic empirical research on the global justice movement, Globalization from Below analyzes a movement from the viewpoints of the activists, organizers, and demonstrators themselves. The authors traveled to Genoa with anti-G8 protesters and collected data from more than 800 participants. A year later, they surveyed 2,400 activists at the European Social Forum in Florence. To understand how this cycle of global protest emerged, they examine the interactions between challengers and elites, and discuss how these new models of activism fit into current social movement work.
Globalization from Below places the protests within larger debates, revealing and investigating the forces that led to a clash between demonstrators and the Italian government, which responded with violence.
Donatella della Porta is professor of political science and co-author of Policing Protest; Massimiliano Andretta is a researcher in political science and sociology; Lorenzo Mosca is a researcher in political science and sociology; Herbert Reiter is a researcher in history, all at the European University Institute.
336 pages | 10 line art, 26 tables | 5 7⁄8 x 9 | 2006
Social Movements, Protest, and Contention Series, volume 26TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations1. Globalization and Social Movements
2. The Development of a Global Movement: Network Strategies, Democracy, Participation
3. Master Frame, Activists’ Ideas, and Collective Identity
4. Global-Net for Global Movements? A Network of Networks for a Movement of Movements
5. Media-Conscious and Nonviolent? Protest Repertoires
6. Transnational Protest and Public Order
7. Politics, Antipolitics, and Other Politics: Democracy and the Movement for Globalization from Below
8. The Global Movement and DemocracyNotes
Bibliography
Index