Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Jun 2017

WHY ONLY SOME LIFESTYLE ACTIVISTS AVOID STATE-ORIENTED POLITICS: A CASE STUDY IN THE BELGIAN ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT*

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Page Range: 245 – 264
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-22-2-245
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Lifestyle politics are often defined as a political strategy used to avoid state-oriented politics. However, recent studies indicate that in some cases, lifestyle activists engage in actions that target the state. This study investigates why some lifestyle activists combine these forms of engagement, while others do not. We explore whether such differences can be explained by variations in activists' perceptions of the political opportunity structure. In particular, we consider whether perceptions of input structures and output structures offer relevant predictors for combining lifestyle politics with state-oriented actions. The article presents an in-depth case study of a Belgian environmental lifestyle movement organization, using a mixed methods approach including participant observation, qualitative interviewing, and surveys. The findings reveal that lifestyle activists' perceptions of the openness of the system matter, but that beliefs in the state's ability to act are more diverse and therefore have a stronger effect on activists' propensity for state-oriented action.

Copyright: © 2017 Mobilization: An International Quarterly 2017

Contributor Notes

* We would like to thank the members and professional core of VELT for their cooperation in this study, and Saskia Bollen for her contribution to data analysis. We are also grateful to the reviewers of this journal and to the participants in the ECPR Summer School on Participation and Mobilization 2013 for their valuable feedback on earlier versions of this article. This article was written with support from the European Research Council, project 295920 (Democratic Linkage) and IAP-Partirep II.

Joost de Moor is postdoctoral research associate at the School of Politics, Philosophy, International Relations, and Environment at Keele University. Sofie Marien is assistant professor at the Centre for Political Science Research at KU Leuven and at the department of political science at the University of Amsterdam. Marc Hooghes is professor in the Centre for Political Science Research at KU Leuven.

Please direct correspondence to Joost de Moor at j.de.moor@keele.ac.uk.
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