ABSTRACT

When the Iron Curtain lifted in 1989, it was seen by some as proof of the final demise of the ideas and aspirations of the radical left. Not many years passed, however, before the critique of social inequalities and capitalism was once again a main protest theme of social movements. This book provides an account of radical left movements in today’s Europe and how they are trying to accomplish social and political change.

The book’s international group of leading experts provide detailed analysis on social movement organizations, activist groups, and networks that are rooted in the left-wing ideologies of anarchism, Marxism, socialism, and communism in both newly democratized post-communist and longstanding liberal-democratic polities. Through a range of case studies, the authors explore how radical left movements are influenced by their situated political and social contexts, and how contemporary radical left activism differs from both new and old social movements on one hand, and the activities of radical left parliamentary parties on the other. Ultimately, this volume investigates what it means to be ‘radical left’ in current day liberal-democratic and capitalist societies after the fall of European state socialism.

This is valuable reading for students and researchers interested in European politics, contemporary social movements and political sociology.

chapter 1|21 pages

Radical left movements in Europe

An introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Radical left parties and movements

Allies, associates, or antagonists?

chapter 5|19 pages

Contentious labour in Italy and Greece

Movements and trade unions in times of precarity and austerity

chapter 6|18 pages

Left without its party

Interest organizations of former GDR elites and the transformation of the PDS/Linke

chapter 7|18 pages

“History bites us by the neck”

Contemporary communism(s) in Finland and France

chapter 8|19 pages

Troubles with the (troubled) past

Anarchists in Poland after 1989

chapter 9|17 pages

Rethinking transformative events to understand the making of new contentious performances

The “autonomous left” and the anti-fascist blockade in Lund 1991

chapter 10|20 pages

The radical left movement, revolutionary groups, and Syriza

Framing militant dissidence during the Greek crisis

chapter 11|18 pages

Diffusion of radical repertoires across Europe

The arrival of insurrectionary anarchism to Finland

chapter 12|19 pages

The Ukrainian new left and student protests

A thorny way to hegemony

chapter 13|18 pages

Taking every opportunity against the state

Anarchists in contemporary Russia

chapter 14|20 pages

Radical anti-fascism in Scandinavia

Shifting frames in relation to the transformation of the far right

chapter 15|12 pages

A resurgence of the radical left?

Some notes