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Cosmos

The Centre on Social Movement Studies

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2026-02-03

Call for papers: Contentious Politics in Spain: Cycles, Transformations and New Repertoires of Contention

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Over the last two decades, Spain has become a particularly fertile laboratory for the study of contentious politics. From the alter-globalisation mobilisations of the early 2000s to the anti-austerity cycle, the 15M movement, feminist and climate mobilisations, housing struggles, and, more recently, protests against touristification and authoritarian backlash, Spain has experienced successive waves of collective action that have reshaped political conflict, organisational forms, and repertoires of contention.

This Special Issue aims to provide a theoretically informed and empirically grounded analysis of contentious politics in Spain, situating recent and ongoing mobilisations within broader debates in social movement studies, political sociology, and contentious politics. While individual contributions may focus on specific movements or episodes, the Special Issue as a whole seeks to capture longer-term dynamics, examining transformations and continuities across protest cycles, actors, and arenas of contention.

The Spanish case allows for an analysis of contentious politics in which multiple dynamics – successive protests cycles, partial institutionalisation, shifting repertoires, and emerging counter-mobisations – intersect over decades. Taken together, the Special Issue seeks e to explore how contentious politics unfold under conditions of polycrisis, including economic precarisation, democratic disaffection, territorial conflict, environmental degradation, and the rise of reactionary and authoritarian counter-movements. In this sense, the Special Issue aims not only to advance empirical knowledge on Spain, but also to contribute to comparative and theoretical discussions on protest cycles, movement innovation, and political conflict in contemporary democracies.

Contributions may address, but are not limited to, the following thematic lines:

●        Protest cycles, continuities, and ruptures in Spanish contentious politics

●        Diffusion, spillover effects, and cross-movement influences

●        Repertoires of contention

●        Youth, precarity, and biographical trajectories of activism

●        Feminist, climate, housing, and anti-touristification mobilisations

●        State responses, repression, policing, and legal constraints on protest

●        Counter-movements, backlash, and the mobilisation of the far right

●        Movement outcomes, political impacts, and institutional transformations

Both qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method contributions are welcome, as well as comparative perspectives that situate Spain within broader regional or international contexts.

 

Important dates

●        April 1, 2026: Submission of long abstracts (800 – 1,000 words)

●        April 20, 2026: Communication of selected abstracts

●        September 15, 2026: Submission of full papers to the Journal

●        December 15, 2026: Provision of peer review feedback

●        January 15, 2027: Submission of revised drafts

 

Long abstracts should include the following information:

  1. A description of the topic
  2. How the paper addresses one or more of the nodal points of the Special Issue
  3. Empirical data and methodology
  4. Findings

 

Instructions for Applicants

The total length of the article must not exceed 10,000 words (and not be less than 8,000 words). Please note that the word count includes references, notes, tables, figures, and diagrams. All papers will be sent to two external referees for final assessment.

 

Editors: Gomer Betancor (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia); Marta Romero-Delgado (Universidad Complutense de Madrid); Alejandro Ciordia (Maastricht University & Scuola Normale Superiore)

To send your paper proposal, please submit a long paper abstract (800-1,000 words) to gbetancor@poli.uned.es, martaromerodelgado@ucm.es and alejandro.ciordiamorandeira@sns.it by April 1, 2026.

News

Publications

Journal Article - 2025

Communication creates partial organization: A comparative analysis of the organizing practices of two climate action movements, Youth for Climate and Fridays for Future Italy

Marco Deseriis, Lorenzo Zamponi, Diego Ceccobelli
This article focuses on a neglected aspect of the climate action movement Fridays for Future, namely, the relationship between its mediated communication practices and its early organizational processes. Drawing from a strand of organizational communication that underscores the constitutive dimension of communication to organizing processes, we analyze the significance of mediatized leadership and networked communication for the foundation and early development of two national chapters of Fridays for Future: Youth for Climate (YFC) Belgium and Fridays for Future Italy (FFFI).

Journal Article - 2023

Resisting right-wing populism in power: a comparative analysis of the Facebook activities of social movements in Italy and the UK

Niccolò Pennucci
This paper aims to present a comparative study of the civil society reaction to right-wing populism in power through social media, by looking at cases in Italy and the United Kingdom.

Journal Article - 2023

Emotions in Action: the Role of Emotions in Refugee Solidarity Activism

Chiara Milan
This article investigates the different types of emotions that result from participation in refugee solidarity activism, investigating how they change over time and to what extent they explain why individuals remain involved in action in spite of unfavorable circumstances.

Journal Article - 2023

‘Love is over, this is going to be Turkey!’: cathartic resonance between the June 2013 protests in Turkey and Brazil

Batuhan Eren
This study addresses the question of why and how a protest can inspire individuals in distant countries. Taking the June 2013 protests in Turkey and Brazil as cases, it investigates the reasons why the Turkish protests were framed as one of the inspirational benchmarks by some Brazilian protesters.

Journal Article - 2023

Mutual aid and solidarity politics in times of emergency: direct social action and temporality in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic

Lorenzo Zamponi
From the spring of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic and the social distancing measures introduced created a series of social problems and needs that were partially addressed in Italy as well as in other countries by grassroots mutual aid initiatives. While many of these initiatives were strongly rooted in the Italian social movement and civil society landscape and the choice to engage in mutual aid activities was the result of long years of reflection and planning, the article shows how strongly the temporality of emergency affected the nature of these initiatives, their development and their outcomes, in particular with regard to the extraordinary number of people who volunteered and their relationship with politicisation processes.

Monograph - 2023

Populism and (Pop) Music

Manuela Caiani, Enrico Padoan
The book provides a detailed account of the links between production of popular culture to the rise of populism and contributes to studies on populism and popular culture in Italy, using a comparative approach and a cultural sociology perspective

Monograph - 2022

Labour conflicts in the digital age

Donatella della Porta, Riccardo Emilio Chesta, Lorenzo Cini
From Deliveroo to Amazon, digital platforms have drastically transformed the way we work. But how are these transformations being received and challenged by workers? This book provides a radical interpretation of the changing nature of worker movements in the digital age, developing an invaluable approach that combines social movement studies and industrial relations. Using case studies taken from Europe and North America, it offers a comparative perspective on the mobilizing trajectories of different platform workers and their distinct organizational forms and action repertoires.

Monograph - 2022

Resisting the Backlash: Street Protest in Italy

Donatella della Porta, Niccolò Bertuzzi, Daniela Chironi, Chiara Milan, Martín Portos & Lorenzo Zamponi
Drawing interview material, together with extensive data from the authors’ original social movement database, this book examines the development of social movements in resistance to perceived political "regression" and a growing right-wing backlash.

Journal Article - 2021

Learning from Democratic Practices: New Perspectives in Institutional Design

Andrea Felicetti
Drawing from literature on democratic practices in social movements and democratic innovations, the article illustrates three ways to advance institutional design in the wake of the systemic turn.

Journal Article - 2021

Populism between voting and non-electoral participation

Andrea Pirro & Martín Portos
The article focuses on a neglected aspect of populist mobilisation, i.e. non-electoral participation (NEP), and elaborates on the extent to which populist party voters engage politically outside the polling station. While challenging common understandings of populism as inherently distrustful and apathetic, and protest as an exclusive practice of the left, the study critically places NEP at the heart of populism in general, and populist right politics in particular.