ABSTRACT

The years 2008 to 2013 saw a new generation of political protestors take to the streets. Riots disrupted many Western cities and new protest movements emerged, keen to address a bleak context of economic collapse and austerity politics.

In this groundbreaking new study, Winlow, Hall, Briggs and Treadwell push past the unworldly optimism of the liberal left to offer an illuminating account of the enclosure and vacuity of contemporary politics. Focusing on the English riots of 2011, the ongoing crisis in Greece, the Indignados, 15M and Podemos in Spain, the Occupy movement in New York and London and the English Defence League in northern England, this book uses original empirical data to inform a strident theoretical critique of our post-political present. It asks: what are these protest groups fighting for, and what are the chances of success?

Written by leading criminological theorists and researchers, this book makes a major contribution to contemporary debates on social order, politics and cultural capitalism. It illuminates the epochal problems we face today. Riots and Political Protest is essential reading for academics and students engaged in the study of political sociology, criminological theory, political theory, sociological theory and the sociology of deviance.

chapter 1|27 pages

Introduction

Name your beliefs; identify your enemy

chapter 2|31 pages

Part I

Gulags and gas chambers

chapter 3|43 pages

Part II

The liberal attack upon utopianism

chapter 4|29 pages

The Return Of Politics

The EDL in northern England

chapter 5|15 pages

The Consumer Riots Of 2011

chapter 6|18 pages

What Was Occupy?

chapter 7|16 pages

Spain And The Indignados

chapter 8|16 pages

The Trouble With The Greeks

chapter 9|7 pages

Conclusion