logo right EN

Select your language

 

 

 

LABORATORY ON CONTENTIOUS POLITICS

https://lcp.panteion.gr/
Logo

fhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/contentious/

 

Director:  Assoc. Prof. Seraphim Seferiades This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

The Laboratory on Contentious Politics (previously ‘Contentious Politics Circle’) is an interdisciplinary network of scholars, researching, theorizing and writing about collective action and social movements and their constant interaction with state policies. Composed of academics, recent PhDs and PhD candidates from Greece and abroad (as well as interested graduate students), it is based at the Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens (Department of Politics & History) and co-operates actively with the Contentious Politics Working Group of the Committee on Political Sociology (joint member of the International Political Science Association –IPSA, and International Sociological Association –ISA). Since 2008-09, it operates a yearly seminar on the political sociology, the culture and history of collective action bringing together original contributions on a variety of topics –including, among other themes, the impact of the recent Eurozone crisis on political contention. The laboratory also organizes conferences, workshops and other special events. The volume Violent Protest, Contentious Politics and the Neoliberal State (Ashgate, 2012), is the product one such successful conference, held in Athens back in 2009.

 

Laboratory on Contentious Programmatic Statement

Emergent supranational —‘multi-level’— governance structures, dense multipurpose, transnational networks, and fading territoriality (even when contradicted by resurgent localism) combine to transform the environment within which contemporary collective action is undertaken. In the early 21st century, and contrary to what used to be the case only a few years ago, contentious claims and discourse (or framings) are transmissible almost instantaneously. Assessment of these developments, however, raises more questions than answers. Although categorical (and mutually contradictory —glowing or gloomy) verdicts are in no short supply, most scholars approach the new environment as a puzzle. As Charles Tilly put it back in 2004,
[Will] the twenty-first century finally bring social movements to the long-dreamed culmination of People Power across the world?
[Will] technologies of communication such as text-messaging mobile telephones … provide the means for activists and ordinary people to shift the tactical balance away from capitalists, military leaders, and corrupt politicians? Or, on the contrary, [is the recent upsurge in collective action] … merely … the last churning of popular politics in the wake of globalisation’s dreadnaught?
Seeking a holistic appraisal of contemporary circumstances in a historical perspective, this Research Laboratory seeks to inspire original work —mainly (though not exclusively) within the booming Contentious Politics tradition— to explore topics such as:

  •     The new environment as structure: ‘global civil society’ or waning democratic accountability?
    What exactly characterises the ‘complex internationalism’ (Tarrow) brought about by —and reflected in— the operation of supranational institutions such as the WTO, the World Bank, and the EU; NGOs such as Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and OXFAM; and incipient transnational contentious networks engaged in coordinated international campaigns against international actors? Can we speak of a new political opportunity structure with a modicum of stability and, if so, how does it influence collective action and social movement prospects? Is the new balance of opportunities and threats likely to serve as a catalyst for the emergence of a new ‘global civil society’ or does it merely underscore proliferating democratic deficits? How do these developments combine with rising police repressiveness (especially in the wake of the global financial crisis and the eruption of the refugee issue)?
  •     Collective action repertoires: transnational disruption, terrorist violence, and conventional protest in the era of globalization
    What sort of changes are social movement repertoires undergoing? Do they entail genuine transformations or are they merely epiphenomenal and transitory? What is the nature, prerequisites and dynamic of transnational contention (both as organizational practice and as vision beyond the nation-state) and how does it materialize in different global settings/ regions? Does it involve mimetic diffusion, creative domestication, or the imposing externalization of northern forms? How can we conceptualise contemporary contentious disruption, and how does it differ from violence and conventional collective action?
  •     Policy content, contentious meaning, cultural framings
    One lasting contribution of social movements literature has been hammering home that collective action entails, requires, and reflects ‘cognitive liberation’ (McAdam): overcoming conventional-apologetic readings of reality and the essentialism of the ‘inescapable present’. Although social movements are principally characterized by the practical goals they uphold (democracy-deepening institutional reform), their experience cannot be reduced to its instrumental-utilitarian dimensions. In addition to being means, movements are also expressive ends, dense cultural outcomes. In the background of neo-liberal predominance, what sorts of cultural framings are likely to be effective in promoting alternative visions of the future? For example, does the movement against neo-liberal globalization lay the grounds for the re-emergence of cogent critical narratives, or is it just another fleeting glimmer in a meaningless world?
  •     Organisational structures: old dilemmas and the challenge of transnational networks
    Recurrent impasses of traditional hierarchical structures (an appraisal intensified by the dramatic collapse of communism and the emergence of opaque, state-sponsored forms such as the ‘cartel parties’) have long spurred an agonising quest for alternatives: organising structures that would be based on loose, semi-autonomous networks at the grassroots level without this precluding leadership-level coordination and common action. How does the organisational landscape look like today, in the era of e-mail, SMS, and low-cost international networking? Do these means of communication help solve the organisational problem or do they merely recycle it by transforming its outer appearances? What about democracy as accountability: the view that ‘participatory decentralisation’ conceals arbitrariness that prepares the ground for murky compromise and incorporation? And what of policy content? Does present-day ideological polymorphism make a contribution to contentious dynamics or is it merely a reflection of political formlessness?

Aspiring equally to theory formation/adjudication and empirical documentation expected to illuminate a wide range of cases drawn from both the global north and the noticeably less known south, the Laboratory will organise conferences, panels at international conferences and special events leading to publication in academic journals and edited volumes. It will also seek ways to build a global data bank of protest events open to scholars internationally, whilst also considering the possibility of starting a specialised journal.

PUBLICATIONS

pub
VIOLENT PROTEST, CONTENTIOUS POLITICS,
AND THE NEOLIBERAL STATE

Edited by Seraphim Seferiades, Panteion University, Greece and Hank Johnston, San Diego State University, USA, © 2012 – Routledge
Series : The Mobilization Series on Social Movements, Protest, and Culture

 

This volume of cutting-edge research comparatively analyzes violent protest and rioting, furthering our understanding of this increasingly prevalent form of claim making. Hank Johnston and Seraphim Seferiades bring together internationally recognized experts in the field of protest studies and contentious politics to analyze the causes and trajectories of violence as a protest tactic. Crossnational comparisons from North America, Britain, France, Germany, Greece, Iran, Thailand, and elsewhere contribute to the volume's theoretical elaboration, while several case studies add depth to the discussion. This title will be of key importance to scholars across the social sciences, including sociology, political science, geography and criminology. Johnston and Seferiades's exciting book is a significant contribution to the study of rioting and violent protest in the contemporary neoliberal state.
Contents: Preface; Section I Theoretical Perspectives: The dynamics of violent protest: emotions, repression and disruptive deficit, Seraphim Seferiades and Hank Johnston; Protest movements and violence, Frances Fox Piven; The outcomes of political violence: ethical, theoretical, and methodological challenges, Lorenzo Bosiand Marco Guigni; Age cohorts, cognition, and collective violence, Hank Johnston. Section II Regional Perspectives: France, Germany, and United Kingdom: Political violence in Germany: trends and exploration of causes, Dieter Rucht; The 'unusual suspects': radical repertoires in consensual settings, Mario Diani; The riots: a dynamic view, Donatella della Porta and Bernard Gbikpi. Section III Comparative Perspectives: Protest and repression in democracies and autocracies: Europe, Iran, Thailand, and the Middle East 2010–2011, Jack A. Goldstone; Contemporary French and British urban riots: an exploration of the underlying political dimensions, David Waddington and Mike King; The volatility of urban riots, Marilena Simiti. Section IV The Greek December, 2008: The Greek December, 2008, Hank Johnston and Seraphim Seferiades; Along the pathways of rage: the space-time of an uprising, Loukia Kotronaki and Seraphim Seferiades; Radical minorities, a decade of contention and the Greek December 2008, Nikos Lountos; Bibliography; Index

 

 

 

Certificates

Ruth Benedict

sertif

 

Policy & Directions

Photos

Contact us

Contact data

Tel.: +30 210 920 1386, +30 210 920 1043
Email: polhist'@'panteion.gr

Location

136, Syggrou ave. 176 71 Kallithea, Greece