CÍSAŘ, Ondřej and Jiří NAVRÁTIL. At the Ballot Boxes or in the Streets and Factories: Economic Contention in the Visegrad Group. In Marco Giugni, Maria T. Grasso. Austerity and Protest. Popular Contention in Times of Economic Crisis. Farnham: Ashgate, 2015, p. 35-53. The Mobilization Series on Social Movements, Protest, and Culture. ISBN 978-1-4724-3918-5.
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Basic information
Original name At the Ballot Boxes or in the Streets and Factories: Economic Contention in the Visegrad Group
Authors CÍSAŘ, Ondřej (203 Czech Republic, guarantor) and Jiří NAVRÁTIL (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution).
Edition Farnham, Austerity and Protest. Popular Contention in Times of Economic Crisis, p. 35-53, 19 pp. The Mobilization Series on Social Movements, Protest, and Culture, 2015.
Publisher Ashgate
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Chapter(s) of a specialized book
Field of Study 50601 Political science
Country of publisher United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form printed version "print"
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14560/15:00084917
Organization unit Faculty of Economics and Administration
ISBN 978-1-4724-3918-5
Keywords in English protest; mobilization; austerity; economy; Great Recession; Central Europe
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Daniela Marcollová, učo 111148. Changed: 2/5/2016 13:55.
Abstract
Although some knowledge exists on how economic restriction and protests are related in “old” Western democracies, little is known about how economic situation and protest are related in new democracies. This context is different from the established democracies for several reasons. Citizens and social movements in these countries are pictured as apathetic towards politics, disengaged, politically passive, and protesting very little. Simultaneously, these new democracies have been dealing with severe economic and financial hardships already from the very beginning of their existence and have experienced several waves of austerity measures in the last 20 years. The paper examines protest on issues pertaining to economy, welfare, and social policies – which we call “economic protest” – in Eastern Europe and more specifically in the so-called Visegrad Group (Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia). It shows that the level of economic protest varies strongly across these four countries, with Czech Republic and Slovakia being much less contentious than Hungary and Poland. It maintains that available theories are poorly equipped to explain such differences and argue that the explanation lies on the overall structure of the political conflict of these post-communist countries and, more specifically, that economic protest emerges under the conditions of a suppressed economic cleavage in the field of party politics.
Links
EE2.3.30.0009, research and development projectName: Zaměstnáním čerstvých absolventů doktorského studia k vědecké excelenci
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