This book explores the grassroots experience of social movements in Greece between 2008 and 2016. Based on qualitative field research conducted in more than 50 social movement organizations in Greece's two major cities, the book offers an in-depth analysis of the contentious mechanisms that led to the development of such solidarity initiatives.
Haris Malamidis is a post-doctoral researcher at the Department of Sociology at the University of Crete, Greece and member of the Centre on Social Movement Studies (Cosmos) in Florence, Italy.
Acknowledgements Introduction Aim and Contribution Research Design Structure of the Book 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 1.3 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 The Period of Austerity 2.4 Alternative Repertoires of Action 2.5 Conclusion PART II: Social Movements in Food, Health and Labour 3 The Social Movement Scene of Food 3.1 Organizational Structure 3.2 Resources 3.3 Identity 3.4 Conclusion 4 The Social Movement Scene of Health 4.1 Organizational Structure 4.2 Resources 4.3 Identity 4.4 Conclusion 5 The Social Movement Scene of Labour 5.1 Organizational Structure 5.2 Resources 5.3 Identity 5.4 Conclusion PART III: Different applications of Boundary Enlargement 6 Different Scenes, Different Trajectories but the Same Process: A Within-Case Comparison 6.1 Comparing the Scenes 6.2 Comparing the Trajectories 7 Boundary Enlargement in Different Contexts 7.1 The Spanish anti-austerity mobilizations 7.2 The 2001 Argentinean Crisis 8 Epilogue 8.1 Expanding the notion of boundary enlargement 8.2 Future Research Bibliography Annex SMOs Material List of Interviewees Index