Cover
Table of Contents
Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Boundary Enlargement
and Anti-Austerity Mobilizations
1. Theorizing the Process of Boundary Enlargement
1.1 Why Boundary Enlargement?
1.2 Dismantling the process of boundary enlargement
1.2.1 Social Movement Scenes
1.2.2 Organizational Structure, Resources and Identity
1.2.3 Sub-mechanisms, Combinations and Interconnections
1.3 Limitations
1.4 Conclusion
2. The Greek Wave of Anti-Austerity Mobilizations in Context
2.1 Three decades of mobilizations
2.2 From December 2008, onwards
2.3.1 Crisis and Austerity
2.3.2 Anti-austerity mobilizations
2.3.3 The square movement and its decentralization
2.4.1 The social movement scene of Food
Figure 2.1 Repertoires and actors in the social movement scene of Food
2.4.2 The social movement scene of Health
Table 2.1 System of Health Accounts of year 2014
Figure 2.2 Repertoires and actors in the social movement scene of Health
2.4.3 The social movement scene of Labour
Figure 2.3 Repertoires and actors in the social movement scene of Labour
2.5 Conclusion
Part II: Social Movements in Food, Health and Labour
3. The Social Movement Scene of Food
3.1.1 Markets without Middlemen
3.1.2 Collective and Social Kitchens
3.1.3 Collection and Distribution of Food Parcels
3.2.1 Markets without Middlemen
3.2.2 Collective and Social Kitchens
3.2.3 Collection and Distribution of Food Parcels
3.3.1 Markets without Middlemen
3.3.2 Collective and Social Kitchens
3.3.3 Collection and Distribution of Food Parcels
3.4 Conclusion
Table 3.1 Mechanisms and sub-mechanisms in the social movement scene of Food
4. The Social Movement Scene of Health
4.1.1 Affinity Groups Modeling and the Coordination of Autonomy
4.1.2 Internal Structure
4.1.3 Core and Peripheral Networks
4.2 Resources
4.2.1 Fixed Costs
4.2.2 Medical and Office Equipment
4.2.3 Drugs and Medication
4.3 Identity
4.3.1 Social Appropriation through Organization and Resources
4.3.2 Translation and Bricolage
4.4 Conclusion
Table 4.1 Mechanisms and sub-mechanisms in the social movement scene of Health
5. The Social Movement Scene of Labour
5.1.1 Assemblies and Participation
5.1.2 Procedures of Entry and Exit
5.1.3 Networked Cooperativism
5.2.1 Initial Capital
5.2.2 Compensation, Demand and Supply
5.2.3 Investing within
5.3 Identity
5.3.1 Contentious Origins of Self-management
Table 5.1 Political and Social Homogeneity
5.3.2 Aggressive and Defensive Self-management
5.4 Conclusion
Table 5.2 Mechanisms and sub-mechanisms in the social movement scene of Labour
Part III: Different Applications of Boundary Enlargement
6. Different Scenes, Different Trajectories but the Same Process: A Within-Case Comparison
6.1.1 Comparing the Organization of the Scenes
6.1.2 Comparing the Resources of the Scenes
6.1.3 Comparing the Identity of the Scenes
6.2.1 Trajectories in Organizational Structure
6.2.2 Trajectories in Resources
6.2.3 Trajectories in Identity
7. Boundary Enlargement in Different Contexts
7.1 The Spanish anti-austerity mobilizations
7.1.1 The case of PAH
7.1.2 The cases of Marea Verde and Marea Blanca
7.1.3 Municipalism and the Feminization of Politics
7.2 The 2001 Argentinean Crisis
7.2.1 Neighbourhood Assemblies
7.2.2 Piqueteros Unemployed Workers Movement
7.2.3 Recuperated Factories and Enterprises
7.2.4 Affective Politics
8. Epilogue
8.1 Expanding the notion of boundary enlargement
8.2 Future Research
Bibliography
Annex
Index