Barcelona, the Left and the Independence Movement in Catalonia

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A01=Richard Gillespie
Ada Colau
AMB
anti-austerity politics
Author_Richard Gillespie
Catalan Education System
Catalan Elections
Catalan Parliament
Category=JP
Central Government
city council of Barcelona
Ciutat Vella District
Civil Society
Downwardly Mobile Middle Class
EP Election
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Esquerra Republicana De Catalunya
EU Demand
EU Pressure
independence movement
left-wing coalitions
left-wing parties
Metropolitana De Barcelona
municipal governance
Observatorio Metropolitano
participatory democracy
Partido Socialista Obrero
Pasqual Maragall
Plataforma De Afectados Por La
Podemos Leadership
Pro-independence Parties
radical municipalism in Catalonia
Real Instituto Elcano
social movement activists
Socialist PSOE
Spanish political transformation
Tourist Apartments
Town Hall
traditional Catalan nationalists
Tram Link
urban social movements

Product details

  • ISBN 9781857439625
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Created by social movement activists and left-wing parties during years of austerity, Barcelona en Comú, or the Comuns (as they are known in Catalan), won control of the city council of Barcelona in May 2015. The ensuing municipal government gave the city its first ever female mayor in the form of former housing rights campaigner Ada Colau. The Comuns' administration proceeded to undertake ambitious initiatives, attempting to regenerate democracy by changing the relationship between municipal authority and citizen, addressing social inequality issues and seeking to curb the hitherto unbridled tourist expansion in the name of improving the environment for those who live in the Catalan capital.

This book examines the extent to which the political project of the Comuns has brought radical change in Barcelona, where it has faced opposition from revolutionary anti-capitalists, traditional Catalan nationalists and independentistas, as well as conservative political and economic forces. It also considers the Comuns' relationship to Podemos and their prospects of growing beyond the city, in the metropolitan area of Barcelona and across Catalonia.

Richard Gillespie is Emeritus Professor of Politics at the University of Liverpool. Before being appointed to the Chair in Politics at the University of Liverpool in 2000, he held posts at the universities of Newcastle, Portsmouth, Warwick and Oxford. His ongoing research interests centre around movements seeking national independence for non-sovereign regions within EU member states, particularly Catalonia.

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