From 8 to 11 November 2012, I attended the Firenze 10+10 meeting of European anti –
neo-liberal globalisation movements in Florence/Italy. Florence had partly also
been chosen as the location for this meeting in memory of the remarkable first European Social Forum held in that city
in November 2002. In this post, I will reflect on the achievements of Firenze 10+10 and analyse the situation
of the European Left more generally.
Thursday, 29 November 2012
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
Portugal – When ‘good students’ turn sour
Portugal has been struggling with
austerity, imposed by the Troika of EU Commission, European Central Bank and
IMF. Higher Education (HE) has been badly affected similarly to the other areas
of the Portuguese public sector. In this guest post, Mark Bergfeld reports from his experience in Lisbon last week of
how students and members of staff mobilised against cuts in HE as part of the
November 14 general strike. He concludes that while the current crisis is
challenging, it nonetheless provides opportunities for students and members of
staff to strengthen their joint resistance against austerity.
Saturday, 17 November 2012
The Greek Left and the Rise of the Neo-Fascist Golden Dawn
The imposition of austerity on Greece by the troika
of EU, European Central Bank and IMF has resulted in enormous social hardship
and societal conflict. The rise of the fascist party Golden Dawn in Greece is
one of the most worrying phenomena in this respect. In this guest post, the
Greek social scientist Panagiotis
Sotiris looks at the underlying causes of the party's increasing popularity
and discusses the challenges for the Greek left in resisting and combating fascism.
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Reflections on a progressive research strategy on European labour
On Tuesday, 6 November I participated in a
workshop on the ‘Future of Trade Unions and Unions Research’ in Berlin,
organised by the Hans Böckler Stiftung and the Wirtschafts- and Sozialwissenschaftliches Institut (WSI). The purpose of the workshop was to try to envisage the role of
unions in past, present and future research on Europe’s political economy writ
large. In this post, I will reflect on what key aspects of an innovative
research project on the future of European trade unions could look like. In
more detail, I will identify three key aspects: (1) the importance of
conceptualising the implications of the changing social relations of
production; (2) the potential role of trade unions beyond the workplace; and
(3) the necessity to learn from the Global South.
Monday, 5 November 2012
European Citizens’ Initiative on Water and the alternative to Austerity Europe
In this guest post, written on request, Jan Willem
Goudriaan, Deputy General Secretary of the European Federation of Public
Service Unions (EPSU), explains how the European
Citizens Initiative (ECI) on the Human Right to Water is part of a broader
struggle for change and alternatives to the current policies of the European
Commission and most governments.