Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation

Abstract The austerity policies implemented following the financial crisis of 2008 in Portugal led to high contention in the public sphere. New, mostly young, and urban social movements took central stage in organising it, often articulated with traditional actors (labour unions or left-wing political parties). These movements presented a very unified image and message to the public, the media, and the institutions whose policies they opposed, based on a shared interpretation of social justice. These coalitions included feminist and LGBTQIA+ organisations, with a story of past activism which is said to have been pushed aside so they could cooperate in the priority anti-austerity arena. This paper questions whether these identities were indeed side-lined, relying on content analysis of materials made available online by those organisations to argue that feminist and LGBTQIA+ protesters framed their mobilisation through a gendered interpretation of the events and consequences of austerity, closely related to their previous values, beliefs, and incentives to participate in social activism.

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Main Author: Araújo,Cláudia
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Portuguesa de Sociologia 2023
Online Access:http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1647-33372023000200034
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spelling oai:scielo:S1647-333720230002000342023-12-12Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity MobilisationAraújo,Cláudia anti-austerity mobilisation Portugal feminist LGBTQIA+. Abstract The austerity policies implemented following the financial crisis of 2008 in Portugal led to high contention in the public sphere. New, mostly young, and urban social movements took central stage in organising it, often articulated with traditional actors (labour unions or left-wing political parties). These movements presented a very unified image and message to the public, the media, and the institutions whose policies they opposed, based on a shared interpretation of social justice. These coalitions included feminist and LGBTQIA+ organisations, with a story of past activism which is said to have been pushed aside so they could cooperate in the priority anti-austerity arena. This paper questions whether these identities were indeed side-lined, relying on content analysis of materials made available online by those organisations to argue that feminist and LGBTQIA+ protesters framed their mobilisation through a gendered interpretation of the events and consequences of austerity, closely related to their previous values, beliefs, and incentives to participate in social activism.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAssociação Portuguesa de SociologiaSOCIOLOGIA ON LINE n.32 20232023-08-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1647-33372023000200034en10.30553/sociologiaonline.2023.32.2
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country Portugal
countrycode PT
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Araújo,Cláudia
spellingShingle Araújo,Cláudia
Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
author_facet Araújo,Cláudia
author_sort Araújo,Cláudia
title Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
title_short Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
title_full Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
title_fullStr Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
title_full_unstemmed Gendered Identities in Portuguese Anti-Austerity Mobilisation
title_sort gendered identities in portuguese anti-austerity mobilisation
description Abstract The austerity policies implemented following the financial crisis of 2008 in Portugal led to high contention in the public sphere. New, mostly young, and urban social movements took central stage in organising it, often articulated with traditional actors (labour unions or left-wing political parties). These movements presented a very unified image and message to the public, the media, and the institutions whose policies they opposed, based on a shared interpretation of social justice. These coalitions included feminist and LGBTQIA+ organisations, with a story of past activism which is said to have been pushed aside so they could cooperate in the priority anti-austerity arena. This paper questions whether these identities were indeed side-lined, relying on content analysis of materials made available online by those organisations to argue that feminist and LGBTQIA+ protesters framed their mobilisation through a gendered interpretation of the events and consequences of austerity, closely related to their previous values, beliefs, and incentives to participate in social activism.
publisher Associação Portuguesa de Sociologia
publishDate 2023
url http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1647-33372023000200034
work_keys_str_mv AT araujoclaudia genderedidentitiesinportugueseantiausteritymobilisation
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