Books and Special Issues by Eduardo Romanos
The impact of legacies and memories on social movements has been paid only limited attention in w... more The impact of legacies and memories on social movements has been paid only limited attention in what is now a sizeable literature. While there is a growing interest in memory, there is little systematic theory or comparative research on the long-lasting institutional consequences of important events—or how they are remembered by future generations.
In Legacies and Memories in Movements, Donatella della Porta and her collaborators examine the concepts of historical legacy and memory, suggesting ways to apply them in analyses of the long-term effects of movements, movement participation, and movement strategies and tactics. In particular, they explore a critical juncture, rich with consequences for social movements: the transition to democracy. Through a comparative-historical study of social movements in Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece, the authors tease out the complex and varied ways different modes of transition can produce new types and uses of memories for social movements. To do so, they analyze how moments of transition create institutional change that impacts future movements and consider how past protests enhance and constrain social movements today.
Focusing on the reverberation of events and how past events serve as guides for the future, Legacies and Memories in Movements brings together the literature on collective memory and social movements for the first time.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This book analyses protests against the Great Recession in the European periphery. While social m... more This book analyses protests against the Great Recession in the European periphery. While social movements have long been considered as children of affluent times - or at least of times of opening opportunities - these protests defy such expectations, developing instead in moments of diminishing opportunities in both the economic and the political realms. Can social movement studies still be useful to understanding these movements of troubled times? The authors offer a positive answer to this question, although specify the need to bridge contentious politics with other fields, including political economy. They highlight differences in the social movements’ strength and breadth and attempt to understand them in terms of three sets of dimensions: a) the specific characteristics of the socio-economic crisis and its consequences in terms of mobilization potential; b) the political reactions to it, in what we can define as political opportunities and threats; and c) the social movement cultures and structures that characterize each country. The book discusses these topics through a contextualized analysis of anti-austerity protest in the European periphery.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Special issue published in Revista Internacional de Sociología (74:4) with articles by Robert M. ... more Special issue published in Revista Internacional de Sociología (74:4) with articles by Robert M. Fishman, David W. Everson, Katrin Uba, Lorenzo Bosi, Sofia Helander, Igor Sádaba and Eduardo Romanos.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The protest movements that followed the Second World War have recently become the object of study... more The protest movements that followed the Second World War have recently become the object of study for various disciplines; however, the exchange of ideas between research fields, and comparative research in general, is lacking. An international and interdisciplinary dialogue is vital to not only describe the similarities and differences between the single national movements but also to evaluate how they contributed to the formation and evolution of a transnational civil society in Europe. This volume undertakes this challenge as well as questions some major assumptions of post-1945 protest and social mobilization both in Western and Eastern Europe. Historians, political scientists, sociologists and media studies scholars come together and offer insights into social movement research beyond conventional repertoires of protest and strictly defined periods, borders and paradigms, offering new perspectives on past and present processes of social change of the contemporary world.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Papers by Eduardo Romanos
The Social Science Journal, 2023
Social movements studies have analyzed how the protest affects the electoral agenda and the outco... more Social movements studies have analyzed how the protest affects the electoral agenda and the outcome of elections. Here, we reverse this approach and analyze whether the electoral cycle affects the protest. With the aid of a new dataset that contains all the demonstrations and marches in Spain from 2000 to 2020 (N = 2,255), we test whether the size of the protest is influenced by the proximity of general elections. As elections offer social movements a political opportunity to air their grievances and make their demands visible to political contenders and the public, we test an electoral protest cycle hypothesis whereby the number of participants in protest events will increase as election day draws nearer. Our results confirm the existence of an electoral protest cycle, even after controlling for potential confounders such as the type of organizers, the claims of the protest, the ideology of the government, and city size.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Oxford Handbook of Spanish Politics, 2020
According to cross-national surveys, Spaniards are among the Europeans who participate the most i... more According to cross-national surveys, Spaniards are among the Europeans who participate the most in street protests. At the same time, Spanish social movements have been gener ally understood as deploying a less radical protest repertoire and a relatively weak orga nizational model. Building upon central concepts in social movement studies, this chapter analyses these and other features of the Spanish activist tradition as compared to other Western countries. An especial attention is paid to the strongest protest cycles in Spanish recent history: the years of the democratic transition and the Great Recession. In doing so, this chapter aims to address the long-term effects of regime transition on domestic collective action and organized protest.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Revista Española de Sociología, 2022
El objetivo de esta nota de investigación es realizar un análisis de acontecimientos de protesta ... more El objetivo de esta nota de investigación es realizar un análisis de acontecimientos de protesta en la España de 2020, pero insertándolo en un estudio longitudinal más amplio (2000-2020), con el fin de discutir hasta qué punto la acción colectiva se ha transformado durante la pandemia del COVID-19. El estudio aborda, a partir de una base de datos construida mediante PEA (protest event analysis), tanto las dimensiones cuantitativas de la protesta como sus características cualitativas principales (tipo de participantes, demandas, organizadores, métodos y objetivos) y las pone en relación con las dinámicas de protesta observadas en años anteriores. Se concluye que el número de protestas no disminuyó en pandemia tanto como cabría esperar (mientras sí que lo hizo la participación) y que puede identificarse un perfil particular y diferenciado de la protesta en tiempos de COVID.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Social Movement Studies, 2022
The 15-M mobilizations shook Spanish society and placed the demand for 'real democracy' at the ce... more The 15-M mobilizations shook Spanish society and placed the demand for 'real democracy' at the center of political debate. In order to better understand the scope and impact of the Indignados' democratizing endeavors, this article aims to address an issue that has not received much attention: the connection of this protest cycle with the political economy. To this end, both the opportunity structure generated by the economic crisis and the class and generational conflicts shaping the mobilizations are analyzed. The article proposes that the symbolic and short-term success of 15-M in re-politicizing distributive con icts contrasts with its mediumterm inability to materially democratize the political economy. This relative failure can be explained by the con uence of several factors: on the one hand, 15-M's organizational weakness and its disconnection from a somewhat declining labor movement; on the other, the lack of responsiveness of Spain's political institutions to street politics and the powerful structural inertia of economic dynamics created by decades of neoliberalism. The findings of this case study aim to contribute to scholarly debates on the impacts of social movements and their connection to political economy and social classes.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 2022
This article provides an overview of contentious politics in 21st century Spain using Protest Eve... more This article provides an overview of contentious politics in 21st century Spain using Protest Event Analysis (PEA) based on a large new database (n = 4,062). The analysis identifies different cycles of protest and discusses how they have changed and been continued in the action taken by social movements. While protest before the Great Recession often revolved around global conflicts, since then it has tended to be concentrated at the national and local level in terms of spaces, demands, and objectives. While political parties and trade unions are still important, their actions run in parallel to the emergence of new actors and the revitalisation of others in a movement/counter-movement dynamic. The article analyses these and other characteristics of protest cycles.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 2022
Este artículo explora la evolución de la contienda política en la España del siglo XXI a través d... more Este artículo explora la evolución de la contienda política en la España del siglo XXI a través de un análisis de acontecimientos de protesta (Protest Event Analysis) basado en una nueva y amplia base de datos (n = 4.062). El análisis permite distinguir diversos ciclos de protesta y discutir cambios y continuidades en la acción de los movimientos sociales. Mientras la protesta anterior a la Gran Recesión gira en torno a conflictos en muchos casos globales, a partir de entonces tiende a concentrarse en el nivel nacional y local en cuanto a espacios, demandas y objetivos. Partidos y sindicatos se muestran todavía relevantes al mismo tiempo que surgen nuevos actores y se revitalizan otros en una dinámica de movimiento/contramovimiento. El artículo analiza estas y otras características de los ciclos de protesta.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Revista Española de Sociología, 2018
RESUMEN: El análisis de las consecuencias de los movimientos sociales ha sido relegado a un segun... more RESUMEN: El análisis de las consecuencias de los movimientos sociales ha sido relegado a un segundo plano hasta hace poco tiempo. Los escasos estudios comparativos realizados sobre el tema han arrojado, además, conclusiones dispares. Problemas de indefinición conceptual y la aplicación de metodologías distintas pueden explicar, entre otras razones, tal disparidad. Nuestra propuesta consiste en centrarnos en los resultados políticos que a nivel meso consiguen los movimientos y que responden a las demandas explícitas realizadas por los mismos. Asimismo, señalamos que tales resultados pueden y deben analizarse en relación con cambios concomitantes que se producen, en el medio y largo plazo, en los planos cultural y biográfico. Utilizamos el movimiento 15M y sus resultados políticos, en términos de aparición de nuevos partidos políticos que han generado novedosas políticas públicas e innovadores experimentos de participación ciudadana, como ejemplo de nuestra propuesta.
ABSTRACT: The analysis of the consequences of the social movements has been peripheral until quite recently. Further, the few comparative studies on this topic have reached disparate conclusions. Problems of conceptual vagueness, as well as the adoption of different methodologies, might explain, amongst others, this disparity. Our proposal is to focus on the political results that social movements obtain at the meso level and that respond to the explicit demands articulated by them. Likewise, we defend that such results can and must be analysed as connected with changes that occur on the cultural and biographical levels in the medium and long run. We use the 15M movement and its political results, as exemplified by the emergence of new parties that have brought about novel policies and innovative participatory experiments, as an example of our proposal.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Historia y Comunicación Social, 2018
Este artículo estudia el anarquismo en el periodo posterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial centrándo... more Este artículo estudia el anarquismo en el periodo posterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial centrándose en dos redes significativamente activas en Europa occidental: una red de jóvenes libertarios desafectos de la inoperancia de sus respectivas federaciones anarquistas nacionales, y una red de publicaciones libertarias que puso en circulación la obra de diversos intelectuales críticos con los principios, tácticas y finalidades del anarquismo social tradicional. Estas redes de intercambio y comunicación ayudaron a repensar el anarquismo en un contexto político particularmente poco receptivo a sus demandas. Su estudio nos permitirá definir mejor el periodo de posguerra como fase poco visible del anarquismo que sirvió sin embargo para la formulación de nuevos principios ideológicos y opciones estratégicas. Al final, el artículo sugiere que algunos de estos desarrollos aparecerán más tarde en movimientos de protesta precursores de la movilización internacional de 1968. La hipótesis de trabajo es que la fase de latencia de posguerra sirvió de puente entre los turbulentos años treinta y la nueva visibilidad del anarquismo alrededor de 1968.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Arbor, 2018
La protesta no se distribuye aleatoriamente en el tiempo, sino que se concentra en forma de ciclo... more La protesta no se distribuye aleatoriamente en el tiempo, sino que se concentra en forma de ciclos. Los últimos tres grandes ciclos internacionales de protesta han sido los surgidos alrededor del 68, el movimiento antiglobalización en el cambio de milenio y la reciente movilización por la democracia y contra la austeridad a partir de 2010. Este artículo analiza las continuidades entre estos ciclos centrándose en el impacto cultural de los movimientos sociales a partir de la elaboración y difusión de nuevos conceptos de democracia.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Chapter in Crisis and Social Mobilization in Contemporary Spain The 15M Movement, edited by Benjamín Tejerina and Ignacio Perugorría (Routledge, 119-139), 2017
If the indignados are so angry, why are they laughing so much? Anyone who
visited the Puerta del ... more If the indignados are so angry, why are they laughing so much? Anyone who
visited the Puerta del Sol or any of the other public spaces occupied by the Spanish indignados movement might have asked this question. Indeed this seems to be one of the movement’s paradoxes, the combination of indignation directed at the politicians and the bankers combined with amusing actions and protests. The media have stressed the element of indignation and this is how the movement has become known internationally, the indignados. The label makes reference to the book Indignez-vous! by Stéphane Hessel, which some identify as a main source of inspiration for the Spanish protests. The activists, however, prefer to call themselves the 15M movement in honor of the date that was the starting gun for the movement, May 15, 2011. Indignation is, without a doubt, a central emotion in the Spanish movement. This chapter will try to show the extent to which emotions associated with humor also are.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Más allá de subrayar el hecho de la difusión, este capítulo analiza cómo tuvo lugar ese proceso. ... more Más allá de subrayar el hecho de la difusión, este capítulo analiza cómo tuvo lugar ese proceso. En concreto, me centro en discutir el papel de la agencia en la difusión del 15M en OWS. En este capítulo sostengo que los inmigrantes españoles en Nueva York desempeñaron un papel de mediadores o brokers entre el 15M y OWS, cuya actuación tuvo un impacto en la autointerpretación de OWS como una movilización expansiva, inclusiva y empática. En una era digital en la que las relaciones sociales están fuertemente mediatizadas por las nuevas tecnologías de la información y la comunicación (TIC), también dentro del mundo de la protesta, este capítulo examina el papel desempeñado por otros canales en la difusión de los movimientos sociales, en este caso el contacto cara a cara con activistas de diferentes países.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Los indignados que se movilizaron el 15 de mayo de 2011 lo hicieron en buena medida contra la mer... more Los indignados que se movilizaron el 15 de mayo de 2011 lo hicieron en buena medida contra la mercantilización de la vida social. “No somos mercancía en manos de políticos y banqueros” se leía en la cabecera de las manifestaciones que ese día recorrieron las calles de las principales ciudades españolas. Al mismo tiempo, el movimiento surgido a partir de esa protesta es para muchos el exponente de un cambio de paradigma en la organización de los movimientos sociales que sostiene que las redes sociales virtuales han venido a suplantar a las organizaciones clásicas (y los lazos forjados en ellas) en la coordinación de las acciones de protesta. Las nuevas tecnologías están facilitando hoy en día formas visibles de coordinación contra la mercantilización neoliberal. Lo hacen, sin embargo, apoyándose en unos lazos relativamente más débiles generados a partir de una infraestructura fuertemente mercantilizada como es Internet. Este capítulo pretende ahondar en esta paradoja y discutir el alcance y las implicaciones del ecosistema digital en los modos de coordinación de la resistencia al neoliberalismo y el poder de los mercados.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
On 15 May 2011, a call for protest marches in Spain ignited a social movement, the mobilizing cap... more On 15 May 2011, a call for protest marches in Spain ignited a social movement, the mobilizing capacity, visibility and impact of which had no precedent in the country's recent history. Four years later, some of the Indignados who mobilized against the authorities' response to the financial crisis and the deficits of Spanish democracy have participated in the emergence and development of new political parties that are now ruling some important cities and became an important actor at the national level after elections in December 2015. In the meantime, a strong contentious cycle has taken place in the country. Social movement activists have resorted to a broad repertoire of action, from confrontational tactics to more conventional ones, adopting a horizontal, inclusive, assembly-based organizational model in their groups and networks. Mobilization has caused a change in the domestic field of social movements with the rise of new actors and the strengthening of existing ones. Throughout the cycle, activists have demanded a number of basic citizenship rights that political elites had neglected while prioritizing the interests of powerful economic actors. Activists have also clarified that the crisis was not only of the economy but also of an institutional system that facilitates corruption and impedes the emergence and development of alternatives to neoliberal policies. In this chapter, I present an overview of this protest cycle, focusing on the socioeconomic context, the political opportunities, the forms of action
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This article examines the relationship between social movements' digital democratic innovations a... more This article examines the relationship between social movements' digital democratic innovations and political parties through a case study based on the involvement of 15M activists in the creation and development of new political parties in Spain. By analyzing the impact of certain technological activist groups on the implementation of the movement's demands in terms of mechanisms of participation and deliberation in the new parties through the use of digital technologies, we aim to evaluate the activists' contribution to the transformation of formal politics and the deepening of democracy. In this sense, we explore the role of so-called 'tech activists' as mediators of political participation, and the digital repertoire of action they use. Sources used include various documents and websites as well as interviews with key informants and notes from participant observation in meetings and assemblies.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Introduction to the Special Issue "From Contention to Social Change: Rethinking the Consequences ... more Introduction to the Special Issue "From Contention to Social Change: Rethinking the Consequences of Social Movements and Cycles of Protest", edited by Eduardo Romanos and Katrin Uba, Revista Internacional de Sociología (RIS), 74(4), 2016.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
RESUMEN: Este artículo explora la relación entre humor y protesta a través del estudio de la util... more RESUMEN: Este artículo explora la relación entre humor y protesta a través del estudio de la utilización estratégica del humor en el movimiento 15M en Madrid en 2011. El análisis de diversas plataformas (carteles, performances, documentos internos y comunicación en internet) sirve para evaluar el potencial subversivo del humor en relación con la comunicación de reivindicaciones, la organización interna del movimiento, el reclutamiento de activistas y la construcción de identidad colectiva. A nivel teórico, el artículo subraya las ventajas de combinar un enfoque expresivo con otro que entienda el humor como una acción instrumental de los participantes. Los resultados muestran cómo los activistas fueron en buena medida conscientes de una serie de beneficios asociados a la utilización del humor que iban más allá de la propia acción de divertirse y, en consecuencia, organizaron diversas iniciativas con el objetivo de alcanzar esos beneficios.
ABSTRACT: This article explores the relationship between humor and protest through a study of the strategic use of humor in the Spanish indignados movement. By focusing on four forms of communication (placards, performances, internal documents and Internet communications) in Madrid in 2011, the article assesses the subversive potential of humor in the communication of demands, the internal organization of the movement, the recruitment of potential activists and the construction of a collective identity. At the theoretical level, the article draws attention to the benefits that arise from combining an expressive focus in the analysis of humor with another which sees this as an instrumental action of those involved. Results show that the Spanish indignados were to a large degree aware of a number of benefits associated with the use of humor that went beyond having fun and, therefore, organized several activities in order to obtain these benefits.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Books and Special Issues by Eduardo Romanos
In Legacies and Memories in Movements, Donatella della Porta and her collaborators examine the concepts of historical legacy and memory, suggesting ways to apply them in analyses of the long-term effects of movements, movement participation, and movement strategies and tactics. In particular, they explore a critical juncture, rich with consequences for social movements: the transition to democracy. Through a comparative-historical study of social movements in Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece, the authors tease out the complex and varied ways different modes of transition can produce new types and uses of memories for social movements. To do so, they analyze how moments of transition create institutional change that impacts future movements and consider how past protests enhance and constrain social movements today.
Focusing on the reverberation of events and how past events serve as guides for the future, Legacies and Memories in Movements brings together the literature on collective memory and social movements for the first time.
Papers by Eduardo Romanos
ABSTRACT: The analysis of the consequences of the social movements has been peripheral until quite recently. Further, the few comparative studies on this topic have reached disparate conclusions. Problems of conceptual vagueness, as well as the adoption of different methodologies, might explain, amongst others, this disparity. Our proposal is to focus on the political results that social movements obtain at the meso level and that respond to the explicit demands articulated by them. Likewise, we defend that such results can and must be analysed as connected with changes that occur on the cultural and biographical levels in the medium and long run. We use the 15M movement and its political results, as exemplified by the emergence of new parties that have brought about novel policies and innovative participatory experiments, as an example of our proposal.
visited the Puerta del Sol or any of the other public spaces occupied by the Spanish indignados movement might have asked this question. Indeed this seems to be one of the movement’s paradoxes, the combination of indignation directed at the politicians and the bankers combined with amusing actions and protests. The media have stressed the element of indignation and this is how the movement has become known internationally, the indignados. The label makes reference to the book Indignez-vous! by Stéphane Hessel, which some identify as a main source of inspiration for the Spanish protests. The activists, however, prefer to call themselves the 15M movement in honor of the date that was the starting gun for the movement, May 15, 2011. Indignation is, without a doubt, a central emotion in the Spanish movement. This chapter will try to show the extent to which emotions associated with humor also are.
ABSTRACT: This article explores the relationship between humor and protest through a study of the strategic use of humor in the Spanish indignados movement. By focusing on four forms of communication (placards, performances, internal documents and Internet communications) in Madrid in 2011, the article assesses the subversive potential of humor in the communication of demands, the internal organization of the movement, the recruitment of potential activists and the construction of a collective identity. At the theoretical level, the article draws attention to the benefits that arise from combining an expressive focus in the analysis of humor with another which sees this as an instrumental action of those involved. Results show that the Spanish indignados were to a large degree aware of a number of benefits associated with the use of humor that went beyond having fun and, therefore, organized several activities in order to obtain these benefits.
In Legacies and Memories in Movements, Donatella della Porta and her collaborators examine the concepts of historical legacy and memory, suggesting ways to apply them in analyses of the long-term effects of movements, movement participation, and movement strategies and tactics. In particular, they explore a critical juncture, rich with consequences for social movements: the transition to democracy. Through a comparative-historical study of social movements in Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece, the authors tease out the complex and varied ways different modes of transition can produce new types and uses of memories for social movements. To do so, they analyze how moments of transition create institutional change that impacts future movements and consider how past protests enhance and constrain social movements today.
Focusing on the reverberation of events and how past events serve as guides for the future, Legacies and Memories in Movements brings together the literature on collective memory and social movements for the first time.
ABSTRACT: The analysis of the consequences of the social movements has been peripheral until quite recently. Further, the few comparative studies on this topic have reached disparate conclusions. Problems of conceptual vagueness, as well as the adoption of different methodologies, might explain, amongst others, this disparity. Our proposal is to focus on the political results that social movements obtain at the meso level and that respond to the explicit demands articulated by them. Likewise, we defend that such results can and must be analysed as connected with changes that occur on the cultural and biographical levels in the medium and long run. We use the 15M movement and its political results, as exemplified by the emergence of new parties that have brought about novel policies and innovative participatory experiments, as an example of our proposal.
visited the Puerta del Sol or any of the other public spaces occupied by the Spanish indignados movement might have asked this question. Indeed this seems to be one of the movement’s paradoxes, the combination of indignation directed at the politicians and the bankers combined with amusing actions and protests. The media have stressed the element of indignation and this is how the movement has become known internationally, the indignados. The label makes reference to the book Indignez-vous! by Stéphane Hessel, which some identify as a main source of inspiration for the Spanish protests. The activists, however, prefer to call themselves the 15M movement in honor of the date that was the starting gun for the movement, May 15, 2011. Indignation is, without a doubt, a central emotion in the Spanish movement. This chapter will try to show the extent to which emotions associated with humor also are.
ABSTRACT: This article explores the relationship between humor and protest through a study of the strategic use of humor in the Spanish indignados movement. By focusing on four forms of communication (placards, performances, internal documents and Internet communications) in Madrid in 2011, the article assesses the subversive potential of humor in the communication of demands, the internal organization of the movement, the recruitment of potential activists and the construction of a collective identity. At the theoretical level, the article draws attention to the benefits that arise from combining an expressive focus in the analysis of humor with another which sees this as an instrumental action of those involved. Results show that the Spanish indignados were to a large degree aware of a number of benefits associated with the use of humor that went beyond having fun and, therefore, organized several activities in order to obtain these benefits.
El encuentro se divide en tres sesiones. La primera de ellas contará con la participación de Jeff Goodwin (New York University), Cristina Flesher Fominaya (University of Aberdeen) y José Luis Ledesma (Universidad Complutense), quienes discutirán sobre la definición y la medida de los efectos de los movimientos sociales a partir de la evaluación crítica de los marcos teóricos existentes y el análisis en profundidad de formas emergentes de contienda política. En la segunda sesión, Robert Fishman (Universidad Carlos III), Marisa Revilla (Universidad Complutense) y Susana Aguilar (Universidad Complutense) profundizarán en las consecuencias políticas de los movimientos avanzando nuevas herramientas para una mejor compresión de los efectos de la protesta en el ámbito de las instituciones y las políticas públicas. En la tercera y última sesión, Eduardo Romanos (Universidad Complutense), Igor Sádaba (Universidad Complutense) y Pablo Soto (Ayuntamiento de Madrid) analizarán hasta qué punto y de qué modos las nuevas tecnologías están modulando el activismo político e impulsando procesos de cambio social.
Más detalles sobre las distintas conferencias y mesas redondas pueden encontrarse aquí: https://www.ucm.es/data/cont/media/www/pag-13630/72304.pdf
El plazo de matrícula ya está abierto. La inscripción debe realizarse a través de la página web de los Cursos: http://www.ucm.es/cursosdeverano/matricula
Los Cursos de Verano tendrán reconocimiento de créditos de libre configuración, de grado y de master para aquellos alumnos de la Universidad Complutense que lo soliciten. Asimismo, el Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte reconoce créditos para profesores de enseñanzas no universitarias. Más información en el siguiente enlace: http://www.ucm.es/cursosdeverano/creditos
El encuentro se divide en tres sesiones. La primera de ellas contará con la participación de Mario Diani (Università degli Studi di Trento), María Garrido (University of Washington - Information School) y José Manuel Robles (Universidad Complutense de Madrid), que discutirán sobre el impacto de las nuevas tecnologías en la organización de los movimientos sociales. En la segunda sesión, Jeff Goodwin (New York University), Eduardo Romanos (Universidad Complutense de Madrid) y Héloïse Nez (Université de Tours / CITERES) profundizarán en la dimensión transnacional de la nueva ola de protesta a partir de los posibles intercambios establecidos entre las distintas movilizaciones que la componen a nivel local. En la tercera y última sesión, Robert Fishman (University of Notre Dame), Benjamín Tejerina (Universidad del País Vasco) y Pedro Ibarra (Universidad del País Vasco) analizarán hasta qué punto el fenómeno de los indignados supone una ruptura con patrones y formas de movilización anteriores dentro del panorama de la protesta en España.
Más detalles sobre las distintas conferencias y mesas redondas se pueden encontrar aquí: http://www.ucm.es/data/cont/docs/71-2013-04-24-73307.pdf
El plazo de matrícula ya está abierto. Las becas deben solicitarse antes del 27 de mayo a través de la página web de los Cursos: http://www.ucm.es/cursosdeverano/modalidades
Los Cursos de Verano tendrán reconocimiento de créditos de libre configuración y de grado para aquellos alumnos de la Universidad Complutense que lo soliciten. Asimismo, el Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte reconoce créditos para profesores de enseñanzas no universitarias. Más información, aquí: http://www.ucm.es/cursosdeverano/creditos"