Abstract

The economic downturn of 2008, inseparable from the accelerated privatization of Spain’s public services, led in May of 2011 to the Social Movement popularly known as ‘15-M’. Sol, Madrid’s Central Plaza, became the movements’ main scenario. Participants of the movement, self-identified as indignados (‘outraged’), encouraged answers from a diversity of social perspectives regarding ways of living, moving and thinking the city through discourses of ecology and sustainability. This article reflects on the 15-M movement from the migrant experience in general, but with particular attention to the Ecuadorian context. Through various forms of cultural expression, the 15-M movement should be read from a transnational perspective and from the lived realities of many Spanish residents with ties to the Andean context and to Ecuador’s national space.

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