Abstract

Set against a backdrop of austerity and neoliberal policies affecting many young people adversely, the Nuit Debout protest movement in France began in March 2016 when people gathered in public spaces to oppose the Socialist government’s plan to introduce neoliberal labour legislation. Like other post-2008 movements, Nuit Debout was leaderless, non-hierarchical, and relied on social media for political communication and to mobilise participants. The Nuit Debout was also a movement inspired by powerful moral-political emotions such as righteous anger and hope. In this article, the authors address two questions. First, what features of Nuit Debout distinguished it from earlier social movements in France? Second, what role did moral emotions play in mobilising people to act as they did? Drawing on interviews with young protestors and their own testimonies, we argue that Nuit Debout was a distinctive form of protest for France. One distinguishing feature was the way young people—the “precarious generation”—were motivated by a strong sense of situated injustice, much of which related to what they saw as the unfairness of austerity policies, being deprived of a decent future and the feeling they had been betrayed by governments.

Highlights

  • Set against a backdrop of austerity and neoliberal policies affecting many young people adversely, the Nuit Debout protest movement in France began in March 2016 when people gathered in public spaces to oppose the Socialist government’s plan to introduce neoliberal labour legislation

  • We argue that Nuit Debout was an innovative and distinctive form of protest for France, in which moral-political emotions played a critical role

  • We argue that paying attention to the role of political emotions helps appreciate what moved many young people to participate in Nuit Debout

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Summary

Introduction

“We are not going home tonight!” (“On ne rentre pas chez nous!”). That is how the Nuit Debout protest movement started in France. On 17 February 2016, Myriam Khomri presented to the State Council (Conseil d’État) the new “Bill to create new freedoms and new protections for companies and workers” (Projet de loi visant à instituer de nouvelles libertés et de nouvelles protections pour les entreprises et les actifs) It was a Socialist government led by Prime Minister Manuel Valls, François Hollande Some demonstrators continued marching down the Boulevard Voltaire towards Place de la République, a square in the heart of the city with enormous symbolic significance Centre stage of this large public space stands Léopold Morice’s famous statue of Marianne, the French national symbol who embodies the victory of the French Revolution over the abuses of the power of the elite: the monarchy. We argue that Nuit Debout was an innovative and distinctive form of protest for France, in which moral-political emotions played a critical role

Methodology
The Background to Nuit Debout
Nuit Debout: A Different Kind of Social Movement for France
Nuit Debout and Political-Moral Emotions
Findings
Conclusions
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