Contentious Politics in Catalonia
Book Launch by Hans Jonas Gunzelmann (WZB Berlin Social Science Center) and Discussion by Laia Balcells (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)
Speaker: Hans Jonas Gunzelmann, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Discussant: Laia Balcells, Georgetown University, Washington, DC
Balcells and Gunzelmann will discuss the recent mobilisation and organisation for independence in Catalonia. After Gunzelmann presents his new book, Organizing for Independence, Laia Balcells will discuss this contribution and embed it in her recent research on affective polarization and nationalist conflicts.
Gunzelmann, H. J. (2024). Organizing for Independence. Secessionist Protest, Organizational Change, and the Referendum Crisis in Catalonia. Amsterdam University Press.
About the book: Independence protests are on the rise across Europe, as Spain, the UK, and other states have faced severe secessionist challenges. The largest wave of these protests swept Catalonia and reached its peak in 2017 when the push for a binding referendum led to an unprecedented secessionist crisis. Organizing for Independence explores the question of how the referendum crisis as a threat and opportunity transformed secessionist protest and its organizational basis. Combining protest event data, qualitative interviews, and network analyses, Hans Jonas Gunzelmann shows how organizational change took place inside, outside, and between formal organizations, and was driven by activists’ symbolic constructions of transformative events. The book goes beyond simplistic accounts of secessionist protest by providing a dynamic perspective on strategic interactions between protesters and their opponents and allies. These insights are particularly timely as independence movements all over the world look with great interest at what happened in Catalonia.
The event is part of the Lecture Series Civil Society and Political Conflict.
The venue is wheelchair accessible. Please let Cornelia Klinghammer (cornelia.klinghammer [at] wzb.eu) know if you need special assistance.