On Monday the 8th October 2012, the Academy of Ideas presented a debate which asked where Europe’s young radicals are.
About the debate:
Such was the global political upheaval of last year that many across the political spectrum were moved to ask whether 2011 would become as era-defining as 1968 and 1989. Even those uncertain about the aims and prospects for the Arab Spring couldn’t help but feel inspired by the youth-led demands for democracy and change, which stood in stark contrast to the seeming conservatism and apathy of their Western counterparts. Similar enthusiasm for the spirited rebellion of the young has been shown towards a number of anti-austerity movements such UK Uncut, Spain’s Indignados, Alexis Tsipiras’ Greek SYRIZA coalition and the youthful support for Hollande in France. Meanwhile, from one-off demonstrations such as SlutWalk to large-scale calls for social change like Occupy, social media has become an increasingly influential mobilisation tool for global protest.
Yet a celebration of the radicalisation of previously apathetic youth turns to profound concern over the rise of a “new European far right”, with the likes of Hungary’s Jobbik and Finland’s True Finns complemented by the electoral breakthroughs of Le Pen in France and Golden Dawn in Greece. There is much discussion of how what unites European youth is the relative hopelessness of the “jilted generation”, saddled with debt, ageing populations and high unemployment. The exodus of the young from crisis-ridden countries such as Ireland and Greece seems to indicate the depths of youthful desperation, although some see opportunity for new allegiances and communities of interest to be formed through the turmoil. For some, last summer’s English riots were an angry and incoherent reaction against the politics of austerity; for others, however, the nihilism of the riots suggested that the generation told they have “no future” had become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Do Europe’s youth need to unite together as particular victims of the crisis, or would such a perspective simply breed division between the generations, undermining social solidarity? Is it useful to discuss social movements and problems in generational terms at all? Are there grounds for apprehension in the rise of populism, or is there a danger of scaremongering? Is there potential for a European Spring, or is it more a case of hope springs eternal?
This strand is part of the Crisis in Europe debate series, organised by the European Network of Houses for Debate, Time to Talk, with the support of the Open Society Institute.
Participants:
Speakers:
Clive Bloom
Emeritus Professor, English and American studies, Middlesex University; Author of Riot City: protest and rebellion in the capital
Neil Davenport
Writer; Head of Sociology, JFS Sixth Form Centre; Contributor, spiked
Mary Fitzgerald
Writer; Editor; Campaigner; Former Senior Editor, Prospect
Myriam Francois-Cerrah
DPhil Candidate, Oriental Studies, Oxford University; Journalist; Regular Panellist, BBC1’s Big Questions
Ashley Frawley
Researcher of the problematisation of happiness and wellbeing, University of Kent, Canterbury
Thais Portilho-Shrimpton
Journalist; Former Campaign Coordinator and Web Editor, Hacked Off
Chair:
David Bowden
Coordinator, UK Battle Satellites; Poetry Editor, Culture Wars; TV Columnist, spiked
Produced by:
David Bowden
Coordinator, UK Battle Satellites; Poetry Editor, Culture Wars; TV Columnist, spiked
Video by:
WORLDbytes