Movement–countermovement dynamics in a land use controversy

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Abstract

Recent studies have highlighted the ways in which activism can be suppressed in democratizing nations, yet much of this work tends to be state centered. Our research examines the role that private actors play in the repression of environmental activism in post-socialist Czech Republic. Following the 1989 collapse of the communist regime, the environmental movement experienced a brief period of widespread public support, which quickly gave way to anti-environmental trends and the general vilification of environmental activists. Drawing from in-depth interview data, newspaper coverage, and direct observation, we analyze a contentious highway bypass controversy around the city of Plzeň. Results indicate that environmentalists have been forced to contend not only with political hostility, but also with organized forms of public opposition from an anti-environmentalist countermovement organization.

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Adams, A. E., Shriver, T. E., & Messer, C. M. (2015). Movement–countermovement dynamics in a land use controversy. Human Ecology Review, 21(1), 3–25. https://doi.org/10.22459/HER.21.01.2015.01

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