2019
DOI: 10.20901/an.16.04
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The austerity fuelled wave of contention in Croatia – myth or reality?

Abstract: Analyses of protest dynamics in Croatia are rare, partially because until know it was not possible to view them systematically. Relying on the newly collected protest event data 2000-2017, this paper describes the main trends and dynamics of protest activities in Croatia in the observed period. It re-examines Beissinger and Sasse's claim about the absence of austerity related protests in Croatia after 2008. The analysis shows that though protests directly addressing austerity were relatively scarce, when the p… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Following the 2008 rupture of a global crisis of capitalist accumulation, the EU and national governments, including those of Spain and Croatia, imposed ‘a raft of austerity measures: public spending cuts shrinking the welfare state, marketization, tax cuts for businesses and intensified workfare’ (Davies and Blanco, 2017: 1521). The crisis management and its socially devastating consequences were met by mass protests and social movements around health, education, housing and labour rights, particularly in the European semi-periphery (Bailey et al, 2018; Balković, 2019). In both Barcelona and Zagreb, new democratic practices developed in occupations of squares (Dolenec et al, 2017; Purcell, 2021).…”
Section: Municipalist Practice: Interruptions In the State Machinerymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the 2008 rupture of a global crisis of capitalist accumulation, the EU and national governments, including those of Spain and Croatia, imposed ‘a raft of austerity measures: public spending cuts shrinking the welfare state, marketization, tax cuts for businesses and intensified workfare’ (Davies and Blanco, 2017: 1521). The crisis management and its socially devastating consequences were met by mass protests and social movements around health, education, housing and labour rights, particularly in the European semi-periphery (Bailey et al, 2018; Balković, 2019). In both Barcelona and Zagreb, new democratic practices developed in occupations of squares (Dolenec et al, 2017; Purcell, 2021).…”
Section: Municipalist Practice: Interruptions In the State Machinerymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first occurred in 2011, while the second, much larger one occurred between 2013 and 2016. Regarding the first wave, this mobilisation was part of a much larger anti-corruption wave that occurred in Croatia during 2011, with the so-called "Facebook protests" (Balković 2019;Kunac 2011). Regarding the second larger wave, which peaked in 2015, this is when a number of anti-eviction protests took place.…”
Section: Patterns Of Mobilisation Against the Housing Crisis And Indebtednessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The origins of the Human Shield trace back to 2011, when it emerged in the wave of anti-government protests (Balković 2019). After these protests subsided, one of the leaders, Ivan Pernar, established a political party, Alliance for Change (Savez za promjene), that intended to contest the upcoming parliamentary election (Večernji List, April 29 2011).…”
Section: Who Stands Up To Courts and Banks? Actors And Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%