ABSTRACT
This article discusses 15-M and anti-austerity mobilizations in Spain from the perspective of repression and penalization. The literature has paid a great deal of attention to the consequences of this cycle of protest in relation to the quality of democratic participation and governance; it could be argued that the 15-M movement has raised the standards for key aspects of Spanish democracy. In articulating new counter-hegemonic claims, however, 15-M mobilizations have created an opportunity for new forms of repression. Drawing on criminology, socio-legal studies, and mobilization literature, we argue that this cycle of protest has been penalized. This involves a combination of technologies of repression that include invasive policing, securitization, and criminalization. Penalization needs to be seen as a dissent-suppressing mechanism, a negative response by political authorities and private actors that thrives when societies suffer from widespread anxieties about insecurity and crime.
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Notes on contributors
Kerman Calvo
Kerman Calvo, (PhD, Essex University), is Associate Professor in Sociology at the Universidad de Salamanca.
Aitor Romeo Echeverría
Aitor Romeo Echeverría is a PhD candidate at the Department of Sociology and Communication, Universidad de Salamanca.