Abstract
In this paper, survey data from 60 demonstrations in 8 European countries is analyzed, to explore whether social class matters in political protest. Do different types of demonstrations mobilize different groups of employees/workers? And do social class matter for demonstrators’ attitudes about social inequality, welfare privatization and political trust—or do national context and/or the issue of the demonstration primarily shape these attitudes? This paper describes and analyzes the class composition of a wide range of demonstrations. Furthermore, the paper explores different conceptualizations of social class in the analysis, in order to evaluate their different merits and applicability when analyzing political protests.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 47 |
Publication status | Unpublished - 2012 |
Event | 2012 SISP Conference - Rome, Italy Duration: 2012 Sept 13 → 2012 Sept 15 |
Conference
Conference | 2012 SISP Conference |
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Country/Territory | Italy |
City | Rome |
Period | 2012/09/13 → 2012/09/15 |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Free keywords
- social class
- class identity
- political attitudes
- street protest
- demonstrations