Spanish Greens and the political ecology social movement: a regional perspective
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Date
29/06/2012Author
McFall, Ann Patricia Radford
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Abstract
The present study sets out to challenge a common assumption that Green politics is
virtually non-existent in Spain. This assumed state of affairs has been attributed to a
number of factors including a materialist society which prioritises economic
growth, Spain’s political culture and, finally, the country’s electoral system. The
result, according to the few scholars who include Spain in their studies, is a country
with a weak political ecology social movement (PESM) and a Green party that
enjoys only ‘trivial support’ (Mair 2001:103).
As will be demonstrated, such assumptions are based on an insufficient knowledge
of political ecology in Spain. The lack of knowledge has resulted in Spain’s green
movements and parties being routinely misinterpreted and, indeed, overlooked. The
first and most glaring misconception is many scholars’ persistence in referring to the
‘Spanish Green party’ as if a single party existed. In fact, the ‘Spanish Greens’
comprise not one national party but a variable and variegated number of different
political parties, a few of which have certainly achieved a measure of electoral
success (depending, of course, on how success is defined). Furthermore, it will be
shown that reasons often given for the failure of the Green parties – such as the
country’s alleged lack of interest in environmental matters – overlook other more
pertinent factors such as, for example, tensions between the Spanish Greens and the
environmental movement organisations (EMO), the nationalist factor and continuing
tensions between the ‘green-greens’ and the ‘red-greens’. Despite numerous
problems at party level, the present study will show that Spain’s PESM is as
vigorous as – though different from - that of other countries which are reputed to be
environmental leaders.
To pursue this argument, the thesis will provide an overview of Spain’s Green
parties, setting these within the cultural and historical context of the broader PESM
to which they belong. Drawing on territorial politics literature, the thesis will, in
particular, demonstrate that the territorial dimension – that is, Spain’s division into
17 autonomous regions – has been one of the neglected but determining factors
contributing to the problems besetting the Spanish Greens. It will also be argued
that, in its own way, the efforts of Spanish ecologists have undoubtedly contributed
towards the ‘piecemeal’ greening of Spain.
The arguments are further developed through two in-depth case studies focusing on
political ecology, and more particularly Green parties, in two of Spain’s regions,
Catalonia and Andalucia.