ABSTRACT
We analyse Roșia Montană environmental activism as a critical case that brings together an unusual combination of high levels of transactional activism and high levels of mass protests. We build on the assumptions of civil society in post-communist Europe and the literature on environmental mobilization to investigate the ways in which environmental-based activism developed before and after Romania’s accession to the European Union (EU). Starting from the consensual interpretation of the indirect contribution the EU had in reinforcing the space of manoeuvring and the legitimacy of the pre-2007 Roșia Montană activism, we show that the post-accession period corresponds to an ongoing civil society empowerment despite the state actors’ strong resistance to open policy processes. Roșia Montană activism proves that, under certain conditions, the political actors can lose the total exclusivity in the policy-making in favour of more or less organized actors.
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Notes
1 Claudiu Tufiș’s work on this paper has been supported by UEFISCDI grant PN-III-P4-ID-PCE-2016-0245.
2 The repression is regularly present in descriptions of the 2013 mobilization. The June 1990 repressions is a topos in the discussion. The interviewees evoked the violence of the police with regard to 2011 protests in Cluj and the early phase of the mobilization in autumn 2013. (Interview activist, 10 March 2017; interview, activist Street Delivery, 10 March 2017).