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Cultural Barriers to Activist Networking: Habitus (In)action in Three European Transnational Encounters
Authors:Cristina Flesher Fominaya
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK;2. Department of Sociology, National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Abstract:Transnational coordination is a key aspiration of activists seeking to mobilize globally, yet the literature pays insufficient attention to the impact of cultural differences on transnational networking. In this article I draw on ethnographic data from three European autonomous social movement encounters in the Global Justice Movement (2002–2004) to demonstrate the impact of culture clashes between activists on transnational networking. I use the concept of habitus to explore how routinized, taken for granted, symbolic systems of meaning that individuals from shared locations have in common shape their interactions in transnational encounters. This conception of culture is underutilized in social movement analysis yet offers important insights into internal movement dynamics. I argue that despite the autonomous commitment to radical openness and plurality, a lack of attention to the empirical reality of place‐based activist subcultures and habitus actually works against the “cosmopolitanism” that many activists and scholars aspire to.
Keywords:autonomous social movements  Global Justice Movement  culture  habitus  transnational networks  Europe
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