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Negotiating Im/Politeness Via Humor in the Greek Parliament Marianthi Georgalidou University of the Aegean [email protected]
Georgalidou, Marian. Negotiating Im/politeness via Humor in the Greek Parlament Estudios de Lingüística del Español 43 (2021), pp. 99-121 Negotiating Im/politeness via Humor in the Greek Parliament Marianthi Georgalidou University of the Aegean [email protected] Resumen El objetivo de este estudio es examinar la manera en la que el humor sirve como medio de negociación des/cortés en el discurso de los parlamentarios griegos. (Harris 2001; Morreall 2005; Bippus 2007; Tsakona and Popa 2011; Georgalidou 2011). El humor ha sido abordado como una estrategia de cortesía positiva, en el sentido de mitigar el ataque directo a personas, situaciones o ideas y sirve como medio de crítica indirecta (Haugh 2016). No obstante, el humor -y la ironía- en el disrcurso parlamentario se usa para lanzar ataques contra adversarios y sirve como un medio de construcción de identidades políticas perjudiciales para los adversarios políticos (Tsakona 2011; Nuolijärvi and Tiittula 2011). En el contexto de la crisis económica que atravesó Grecia, el presente estudio basado en datos recopilados de las Actas de las Sesiones Plenarias del Parlamento Helénico durante un período de 10 años (2009-2019), analiza la relación entre el humor y la agresión verbal en el discurso político griego. Las cuestiones abordadas conciernen al humor como modo de comunicación en casos de conflictos que superan los límites de la rivalidad política en el discurso parlamentario (Corranza-Marquez 2010; Georgalidou 2016; Frantzi, Georgalidou and Giakoumakis 2019). La aproximación analítica es émica, basada en el análisis de unidades discursivas como acciones sociales. Por tanto, se analizan episodios de discurso parlamentario agresivo por la organización secuencial de interacción humorística. -
How European Protest Transforms Institutions of the Public Sphere Discourse and Decision-Making in the European Social Forum Process
Working Paper How European Protest Transforms Institutions of the Public Sphere Discourse and Decision-Making in the European Social Forum Process Nicole Doerr No. 8 | September 2009 2 | KFG Working Paper No. 8 | September 2009 KFG Working Paper Series Edited by the Kolleg-Forschergruppe „The Transformative Power of Europe“ The KFG Working Paper Series serves to disseminate the research results of the Kolleg-Forschergruppe by making them available to a broader public. It means to enhance academic exchange as well as to strenghen and broaden existing basic research on internal and external diffusion processes in Europe and the European Union. All KFG Working Papers are available on the KFG website at www.transformeurope.eu or can be ordered in print via email to [email protected]. Copyright for this issue: Nicole Doerr Editorial assistance and production: Farina Ahäuser/Lars Schäfer Doerr, Nicole 2009: How European Protest Transforms Institutions of the Public Sphere. Discourse and Decision-Making in the European Social Forum Process, KFG Working Paper Series, No. 8, September 2009, Kolleg-Forschergruppe (KFG) „The Transformative Power of Europe“, Free University Berlin. ISSN 1868-6834 (Print) ISSN 1868-7601 (Internet) This publication has been funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). Freie Universität Berlin Kolleg-Forschergruppe „The Transformative Power of Europe: The European Union and the Diffusion of Ideas“ Ihnestr. 26 14195 Berlin Germany Phone: +49 (0)30- 838 57033 Fax: +49 (0)30- 838 57096 [email protected] -
The Social Bases of the Global Justice Movement Some Theoretical Reflections and Empirical Evidence from the First European Social Forum
The Social Bases of the Global Justice Movement Some Theoretical Reflections and Empirical Evidence from the First European Social Forum Donatella della Porta Civil Society and Social Movements United Nations Programme Paper Number 21 Research Institute December 2005 for Social Development This United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) Programme Paper has been produced with the support of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC). UNRISD also thanks the governments of Denmark, Finland, Mexico, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom for their core funding. Copyright © UNRISD. Short extracts from this publication may be reproduced unaltered without authorization on condition that the source is indicated. For rights of reproduction or translation, application should be made to UNRISD, Palais des Nations, 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland. UNRISD welcomes such applications. The designations employed in UNRISD publications, which are in conformity with United Nations practice, and the presentation of material therein do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNRISD con- cerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The responsibility for opinions expressed rests solely with the author(s), and publication does not constitute endorse- ment by UNRISD. ISSN 1020-8178 Contents Acronyms ii Summary/Résumé/Resumen iii Summary iii Résumé iv Resumen v Introduction 1 1. Social Characteristics of Political Activists: Four Main Hypotheses 1 2. The Global Justice Movement as a “Movement of Movements”? 6 3. Generations of Activists 9 4. Gender in Movements 10 5. New Middle Class and New Social Movements 12 6. -
SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos
Transnational networking and cooperation among neo-reformist left parties in Southern Europe during the Eurozone crisis: SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos Vladimir Bortun The thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of Portsmouth. March 2019 Abstract European parties to the left of social democracy have always lagged behind the main political families in terms of transnational cooperation at the level of the EU. However, the markedly transnational character of the Eurozone crisis and of the management of that crisis has arguably provided a uniquely propitious context for these parties to reduce that gap. This research project aims to establish whether they achieved that by focusing on three parties that were particularly prone to seeking an increase in their transnational cooperation: SYRIZA from Greece, Bloco de Esquerda from Portugal and Podemos from Spain. For these parties not only come from the member states most affected by the crisis, both economically and politically, but they also share several programmatic and strategic features favouring such an increase. By using a mix of document analysis, semi-structured interviews and non-participatory observation, the thesis discusses both the informal and formal transnational networking and cooperation among the three parties. This discussion reveals four key findings, with potentially useful insights for wider transnational party cooperation that are to be pursued in future research. Firstly, the transnational networking and cooperation among SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos did increase at some point during the crisis, particularly around SYRIZA’s electoral victory in January 2015. Secondly, since the U-turn of that government in July 2015, SYRIZA’s relationship with both Bloco and Podemos has declined significantly, as reflected in their diverging views of the EU. -
Another Europe: Conceptions and Practices of Democracy in the European Social Forums/Edited by Donatella Della Porta
Another Europe Given the recent focus on the challenges to representative democracy, and the search for new institutions and procedures that can help to channel increasing participation, this book offers empirical insights on alternative conceptions of democracy and the actors that promote them. With a focus on the conceptions and practices of democracy within contempo- rary social movements in Europe, this volume contributes to the debate on the dif- ferent dimensions of democracy, especially on representation and participation. The book explores the transnational dimension of democracy and addresses a relevant, and little analysed aspect of Europeanization: the Europeanization of social move- ments. From a methodological point of view, the research innovates by covering a group of individuals traditionally neglected in previous studies: social movement activists. The various chapters combine analysis of the individuals’ attitudes and behaviour with that of the organizational characteristics, procedures and practices of democracy. Providing a cross-national comparison on the global justice movement, the theoretical challenges of the new wave of protest and the rich empirical data this book will appeal to students and scholars of sociology, political sociology, social movement studies, and transnational as well as comparative politics. Donatella della Porta is professor of sociology in the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the European University Institute, Italy. Routledge/ECPR studies in European political science Edited by Thomas Poguntke, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany on behalf of the European Consortium for Political Research The Routledge/ECPR Studies in European Political Science series is published in association with the European Consortium for Political Research – the leading organization concerned with the growth and development of political science in Europe. -
Journal of World-Systems Research Forum on Samir
JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH ISSN: 1076-156X | Vol. 25 Issue 2 | DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2019.952 | jwsr.pitt.edu FORUM ON SAMIR AMIN’S PROPOSAL FOR A NEW INTERNATIONAL OF WORKERS AND PEOPLES Samir Amin, a leading scholar and co-founder of the world-systems tradition, died on August 12, 2018. Just before his death, he published, along with close allies, a call for ‘workers and the people’ to establish a ‘fifth international’ to coordinate support to progressive movements. To honor Samir Amin’s invaluable contribution to world-systems scholarship, we are pleased to present our readers with a selection of essays responding to Amin’s final message for today’s anti-systemic movements. This forum is being co-published between Globalizations, the Journal of World-Systems Research, and Pambazuka News. Readers can find additional essays and commentary in these outlets. The following essay has been published in Globalizations and is being reproduced here with permission. Needed: A New International for a Just Transition and Against Fascism Francine Mestrum Global Social Justice [email protected] Some years ago, during the Greek crisis, I was asked to speak on ‘solidarity’ for a European audience. I started to explain where the concept came from and how and why it is necessarily based on reciprocity. This is what makes it different from charity, a unilateral gift inevitably leading to a demand for gratitude. Solidarity, on the contrary, is always at least bilateral and based on mutual respect. This is the reason why all demands and programmes for solidarity among workers and peoples all over the world are always met with a lot of sympathy. -
The Global Social Forum Rhizome: a Theoretical Framework Peter N
University of South Florida Scholar Commons Government and International Affairs Faculty Government and International Affairs Publications 2012 The Global Social Forum Rhizome: A Theoretical Framework Peter N. Funke University of South Florida, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gia_facpub Part of the International Relations Commons Scholar Commons Citation Funke, Peter N., "The Global Social Forum Rhizome: A Theoretical Framework" (2012). Government and International Affairs Faculty Publications. Paper 119. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gia_facpub/119 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Government and International Affairs at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Government and International Affairs Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Global Social Forum Rhizome - Funke The Global Social Forum Rhizome: A Theoretical Framework Peter Nikolaus Funke University of South Florida [email protected] ABSTRACT Drawing on Deleuze & Guattari’s image of the ‘rhizome’, this article develops a framework for mapping and understanding the global social forum process and its implications for the broader global left. The image of the rhizome is insightful to analytically accentuate the nature and workings as well as the challenges and contemporary shortcomings of the social forum process and more generally the broader global movement(s). Thriving on multiplicity and thus -
International Viewpoint - IV378 - May 2006
NTERNATIONAL I IEWPOINT V News and analysis from the Fourth International IV378 - May 2006 USA - An Eruption in the Streets ESF - An Unquestionable Success Britain - Respect breakthrough International Viewpoint - IV378 - May 2006 IV378 - May 2006 USA May Day - ESF - Britain Iraq Why America wants endless war - Phil Hearse 3 Bolivia Nationalization of Gas! Bolivia's Historic May Day, 2006 - Jeffery R Webber 4 May Day International Manifesto Of The Undocumented 7 Which side are you on? - Sharon Smith 8 USA "The power to stop the system" - Nativo Lopez 9 USA - An Eruption in the Streets - Against the Current 10 Nepal This is no rah-rah revolt - Tariq Ali 12 European Social Forum An Unquestionable Success - Ingrid Hayes 13 News from the European Social Forum, Athens - ESF Press Release 14 Italy A dangerous situation for Rifondazione - Flavia d’Angeli 15 "The Project of Prodi's Centre-Left Union has failed" - Franco Turigliatto 16 France Marie-George, Arlette, José - what if we were to talk? - Olivier Besancenot 19 The mass movement has defeated the government - what now? - Murray Smith 20 Britain The crisis in working class representation - Greg Tucker 22 No renewal for New Labour - Piers Mostyn 23 Respect breakthrough in English local elections - Alan Thornett 24 Latin America: a continent in revolt - Socialist Resistance Dayschool 25 Cuba Fidel and Trotsky - Celia Hart 26 Mexico Zapatistas call Red Alert over state attacks 27 Marcos speech at rally in Plaza of the Three Cultures 28 Mexican miners and steelworkers on strike - Dan La Botz 29 Denmark Huge demonstration against government welfare cuts - Aage Skovrind 31 Fourth International Summer Camp July 2006 A new generation to build a new Europe! 32 2 International Viewpoint - IV378 - May 2006 Iraq Why America wants endless war Phil Hearse In promoting his recently published Quadrennial Defence Review, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld spoke of a “generation-long war”, projecting thirty years of unceasing combat against radical Islam. -
Sociology, Human Rights, and the World Social Forum Frezzo
Societies Without Borders Volume 3 | Issue 1 Article 4 2008 Sociology, Human Rights, and the World Social Forum Frezzo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/swb Part of the Human Rights Law Commons, and the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Frezzo. 2009. "Sociology, Human Rights, and the World Social Forum." Societies Without Borders 3 (1): 35-47. Available at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/swb/vol3/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Cross Disciplinary Publications at Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Societies Without Borders by an authorized administrator of Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. Frezzo: Sociology, Human Rights, and the World Social Forum S W B Societies Without Borders 3 (2008) 35–47 www.brill.nl/swb Sociology, Human Rights, and the World Social Forum Mark Frezzo Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA Keywords sociology of human rights, development, social movements, NGOs In recent years, academics have begun to grapple with the pervasiveness of “rights talk” on a global scale – a phenomenon documented by journalists, grassroots activists, NGO representatives, and UN officials. With the restruc- turing of the interstate system following the Cold War, the expansion of the European Union, a series of financial crises across the global economy, and a dramatic shift among Latin American governments, social scientists have produced a large volume of research on transnational norms,1 cosmopolitan democracy,2 and global governance.3 Rooted in the fields of international relations, government, and law, these interventions share an interest in alter- ing the world’s economic, political, and legal architecture. -
19 Greece Solidarity Campaign 19
GSC UPDATE 19 (August/September 2013) Fundraising Dinner - Wednesday 9th October 7pm - raising money for Medical Aid to Greece - at Andy's Taverna, Camden. Tickets are £25, which pays for delicious food, a glass of house wine, live music, a raffle, guest speeches. Every penny raised will be sent to the free social health clinics set up by activists in the anti austerity movement in Greece and spent on childrens vaccines. To book tickets please send a cheque to Greece Solidarity Campaign, Housmans, 5 Caledonian Road London N1 9DX. Dear friends and supporters of the Greece Solidarity Campaign, Wednesday 18th September 6.30pm - Greece Solidarity Campaign organising meeting The next organising meeting of the Greece Solidarity Campaign is on Wednesday 18th September, 6.30 at Unite House, 128 Theobalds Road, Holborn. All welcome Thursday 19th September, 7-9pm, Unite, Theobalds Road Gold mining in Greece: stories of resistance and repression Come and hear first-hand accounts of resistance to gold mining in Greece by Eldorado Gold, a company listed on the London Stock Exchange. Lazaros Toskas, member of the Struggle Coordinating Committee of Megali Panagia, will share stories of resistance and repression, of mining, rights and the politics of development. The meeting has been organised by Corporate Watch and the London Mining Network. Chaired by Rachel Newton, Greece Solidarity Campaign Great step forward for those organising solidarity with the Greek people at the TUC: This year’s TUC unanimously adopted Motion 78 in solidarity with the Greek resistance and specifically supporting GSC and Medical Aid to Greece. It was excellently moved by Matt Wrack, General Secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, seconded passionately by Manuel Cortes, General Secretary of TSSA, supported by speakers from PCS and UNITE. -
Failure of Labour Politics in Britain, 1964-79
In Place of Liberation - Failure of Labour Politics in Britain, 1964-79 Shannon Ikebe 2011 Politics Honors Thesis Contents Introduction: Keynes’ Children in the 1970s - 3 Chapter 1: Post-Fordism That Never Was - 7 Chapter 2: Ideas and Political Economy - 25 Chapter 3: Welfare State and the Social Wage - 46 Chapter 4: Trade Unions and the Social Contract - 96 Conclusion: How Did the Lights Go Out? - 141 2 Introduction: Keynes’ Children in the 1970s “Objective conditions have never made socialism seem so necessary and so achievable. Capitalism’s self-justification as the natural means of meeting human needs and expanding human possibilities seems more obviously groundless than ever, with every structure of the economy out of joint with human needs… moreover, the means – or at least the groundwork – for achieving such a society, the organizations created by working people themselves, have grown… as the crisis has deepened.” – Hilary Wainwright, Beyond the Fragments (1979) In the midst of the Great Depression, John Maynard Keynes wrote a pithy tract envisioning an optimistic future in which the “economic problem” no longer exists.1 In Economic Possibilies for Our Grandchildren, he posited in 1930 that the generation of his grandchildren would be freed from the struggle for subsistence, because of the tremendous growth in productivity; the opportunity to transcend economic insecurity would be a world-historical moment, in which humanity overcomes what “always has been hitherto the primary, most pressing problem of the human race” and faces a delightful prospect of emancipation from economic imperatives.2 In the past centuries or even millenia, freedom from alienating labor was the privilege for the few, directly dependent upon exploitation of the mass of workers; because of technological transformations, Keynes posited, the realm of freedom could soon be universally accessible. -
Capitalisms Crises: Class Struggles in South Africa and the World
Democratic Marxism Series Series Editor: Vishwas Satgar The crisis of Marxism in the late twentieth century was the crisis of orthodox and vanguardist Marxism associated mainly with hierarchical communist parties, and which was imposed – even as state ideology – as the ‘correct’ Marxism. The Stalinisation of the Soviet Union and its eventual collapse exposed the inherent weaknesses and authoritarian mould of vanguardist Marxism. More fundamentally, vanguardist Marxism was rendered obsolete but for its residual existence in a few parts of the world, including authoritarian national liberation movements in Africa and in China. With the deepening crises of capitalism, a new democratic Marxism (or democratic historical materialism) is coming to the fore. Such a democratic Marxism is characterised in the following ways: • Its sources span non-vanguardist grassroots movements, unions, political fronts, mass parties, radical intellectuals, transnational activist networks and the progressive academy; • It seeks to ensure that the inherent categories of Marxism are theorised within constantly changing historical conditions to find meaning; • Marxism is understood as a body of social thought that is unfinished and hence challenged by the need to explain the dynamics of a globalising capitalism and the futures of social change; • It is open to other forms of anti-capitalist thought and practice, including currents within radical ecology, feminism, emancipatory utopianism and indigenous thought; • It does not seek to be a monolithic and singular school of thought but engenders contending perspectives; • Democracy, as part of the heritage of people’s struggles, is understood as the basis for articulating alternatives to capitalism and as the primary means for constituting a transformative subject of historical change.