In 2019, the world witnessed an exceptional wave of climate protests. In this case study, we scrutinise who participated in the protests staged in Belgium. We ask: did the exceptional mobilising context of the 2019 protest wave also bring exceptional protesters to the streets? Were thanks to the unique momentum standard barriers to protest participation overcome? We answer these questions by comparing three surveys of participants in the 2019 protest wave with three surveys of relevant reference publics. Our findings show that while the Belgian 2019 protest was in many ways exceptional, its participants were less so. Although participants – especially in the early phase of the protest wave – were less protest experienced, younger and unaffiliated to organisations, our findings simultaneously confirm the persistence of a great many well-known socio-demographic and political inequalities. Our conclusion centres on the implications of these findings. |
Politics of the Low Countries
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Article |
Truly Exceptional? Participants in the Belgian 2019 Youth for Climate Protest Wave |
Keywords | protest, participation, inequality, climate change, Fridays For Future |
Authors | Ruud Wouters, Michiel De Vydt and Luna Staes |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
Appendix Truly Exceptional? Participants in the Belgian 2019 Youth for Climate Protest Wave |
Authors | Ruud Wouters, Michiel De Vydt and Luna Staes |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In 2019, the world witnessed an exceptional wave of climate protests. In this case study, we scrutinise who participated in the protests staged in Belgium. We ask: did the exceptional mobilising context of the 2019 protest wave also bring exceptional protesters to the streets? Were thanks to the unique momentum standard barriers to protest participation overcome? We answer these questions by comparing three surveys of participants in the 2019 protest wave with three surveys of relevant reference publics. Our findings show that while the Belgian 2019 protest was in many ways exceptional, its participants were less so. Although participants – especially in the early phase of the protest wave – were less protest experienced, younger and unaffiliated to organisations, our findings simultaneously confirm the persistence of a great many well-known socio-demographic and political inequalities. Our conclusion centres on the implications of these findings. |
Article |
The Ideological Roots of Populist Radical-Right Climate ScepticismA Qualitative Data Analysis of the Case Vlaams Belang |
Keywords | populism, climate skepticism, Vlaams Belang, ideology, radical-right |
Authors | Jasper Praet |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The study of populist radical-right parties has boomed in recent years. Analyses of the discourse of these parties have gone beyond the focus of immigration policies and have turned to their climate communication. Previous research identified populism and the radical-right host ideology as key ideological drivers of their climate scepticism. This study questions which of these ideological features are dominant in the climate discourse of the Belgian populist radical-right party Vlaams Belang. A qualitative data analysis shows that their ideology is most aptly described as conservative and authoritarian. Populism is not salient, in contrast to what previous research has found for other populist radical-right parties. The presence of nationalism is confirmed, but nativism is irrelevant. The results indicate that Vlaams Belang adapts and transplants its core ideology to its climate discourse, but we cannot take the prevalence of populism or nativism in their climate discourse for granted. |
PhD Review |
‘Where Is the Structure? The Ecological Foundations of Voters’ Consistency’PhD by Marta Gallina (UCLouvain), supervisors: Pierre Baudewyns and Ruth Dassonneville (UdeM) |
Authors | Lewis Alexander Luartz |
Author's information |
PhD Review |
‘Going Above and Beyond: A Comparative Case Study of the Multilevel Organisation of National Political Parties in the EU Polity’PhD by Gilles Pittoors (Ghent University), supervisor: Bram Wauters |
Authors | Claire Dupont |
Author's information |
Literature Review |
Compulsory Voting and Voter Turnout in the Low CountriesA Research Overview |
Authors | Sofie Hennau and Johan Ackaert |
Author's information |
PhD Review |
Destructive or Deliberative? An Investigation of the Evolution, Determinants and Effects of the Quality of Political DebatePhD by Ine Goovaerts (KU Leuven), supervisors: Sofie Marien and Anna Kern (Ghent University) |
Authors | Andre Bächtiger |
Author's information |
Politics of the Low Countries will be published by Radboud University Press. New submissions can be be submitted on our new website: https://www.plc-journal.eu/