Organizational scholars have examined how social movements generate institutional change through contentious politics. However, little attention has been given to the role of prefigurative politics. The latter collapses expressive and strategic politics so as to enact the desired future society in the present and disrupt the reproduction of institutionalized structures that sustain deep-seated inequalities. The paper presents an ethnographic study of Occupy London and protesters’ encounter with people living homeless to examine how prefigurative politics is organized in the face of entrenched inequalities. Findings show how the macro level inequalities that protesters set out to fight resurfaced in the day-to-day living in the camp itself. ...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
This article addresses debates in the ‘post-Occupy movement’ over the resistant potential of prefigu...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
When Occupy London emerged with a global wave of protest movements in October 2011, it embodied and ...
This research uses the Occupy Movement as a springboard to discuss contemporary political struggles ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
This paper situates the discourse of the Occupy movement within the context of radical political phi...
types: ArticleAlthough Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not ye...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
Existing social movement theories subsume protests into abstract conceptualizations of society, and ...
This article addresses debates in the ‘post-Occupy movement’ over the resistant potential of prefigu...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
When Occupy London emerged with a global wave of protest movements in October 2011, it embodied and ...
This research uses the Occupy Movement as a springboard to discuss contemporary political struggles ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
This paper situates the discourse of the Occupy movement within the context of radical political phi...
types: ArticleAlthough Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not ye...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...
Considering contemporary movements as sites of struggle between attempts at inclusiveness and enduri...