Stop the evictions! The diffusion of networked social movements and the emergence of a new hybrid space: The case of the Spanish Mortgage Victims Group
Abstract
Over 350,000 families have been evicted from their homes since Spain's property market
crashed in 2008. The response of Spanish civil society has been the emergence of a networked
social movement, Plataforma de Afectados por la Hipoteca (PAH; the Spanish
Mortgage Victims Group), to stop the evictions and change applicable legislation. This
paper uses social movement theory and the travel of ideas metaphor from organization
theory to understand how the PAH movement and its practices and tactics, originally born
in Barcelona in 2009, have successfully spread to over 160 cities and stopped over 1135
evictions throughout the country. We argue that the ability of networked social movements
to quickly replicate has fuelled their power to resist, protest, and induce change.
We contend that the fast growth of networked social movements in Global North and
South cities, is fuelled by its ability to create a hybrid space between communication
networks and occupied urban space in which face-to-face assemblies and protests take
place.
Link to web site
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0197397514001404
Publisher
School of Public Administration/Förvaltningshögskolan
Other description
A revised version of this paper is published in Habitat International
View/ Open
Date
2014Author
Álvarez de Andrés, Eva
Zapata, Patrik
Zapata Campos, María José
Keywords
Networked social movements
Travel of ideas
Evictions,
Economic crisis,
Hybrid space
Spain
Publication type
preprint
ISSN
1651-5242
Series/Report no.
School of Public Administration Working Papers Series
25
Language
eng