Anti-fracking campaigns in the UK: The influence of local opportunity structures on protest
Abstract
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in this record ; Hydraulic fracturing ('fracking') was a controversial issue in the United Kingdom which sparked national and community-led groups to organise protest mobilisations. However, to date, the social science literature has largely focused upon general anti-fracking discourse rather than on the physical, community-led mobilisations that emerged from the frustrations of people directly affected at a local level by threats to their community. The paper develops and applies a novel conceptualisation of political opportunity structures at the nexus of the national and local levels to more fully explore the usually overlooked role of local-level structures in interaction with the national level in shaping protest. It uses protest event analysis with data derived from two key activist-specific sources. The analysis draws on data from over 1,400 protests occurring across sixty-nine counties from 2011-2019. In so doing, this paper observes and accounts for variance in the form and frequency of community-led anti-fracking protest events within and between different areas of England across the life course of the protest episodes. The paper finds that trends in protest frequency and form over time correlate to shifts in opportunity structures, particularly regarding local and national level interaction, and that this can be usefully conceptualised through a local-national-state-nexus. ; Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
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