| Research  Team 2: "Civil  society in the daily press: social and political dimensions"
 RT2 focuses on the social and political dimensions of the public action  taken by ‘civil society’ agents in the period from the fall of the dictatorship  to the rise to power of PASOK. The daily press is selected as principal primary  source because it was the prevailing means of public intervention and  communication during that period.  The research objectives are: a) to create a corpus of source material  that will help future researchers; and b) to contribute to the creation of  explanatory frameworks concerning the domestic ‘civil society’. The research  explores how formal and informal collectivities participate in the public  dialogue and affect historical developments through a complex network of power  relations. The social and political context of the years after the fall of the  dictatorship is a compelling field of inquiry for the examination of social and  political demands, the relationships between the state and the ‘civil society’,  and the dynamic of the latter. The ethnography of the voluntary associations at  the beginning of the 21st century aims at exploring the micro-level  of public sociality in a subsequent period, in which there was an upsurge in  public discussion on ‘civil society’.  RT2 is based at the Department of Political Science and Public  Administration of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. The Main  Research Team consists of two faculty members of the same department, Professor  Chrystos Lyrintzis as the Team Leader and Associate Professor Dimitris  Sotiropoulos. The External Research Team includes Dr John Karagiannis, Katerina  Loukidou, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Athens, and Katerina Rozakou,  PhD, University of Aegean.  The specific case studies of  RT2 are the following: Christos Lyrintzis and Yiannis  Karayiannis: “Aspects of social and political demand (1974-1981)” Based on archival data from the  daily press, this study examines selected cases of associations in order to  systematically explore aspects of social and political demands that appeared  during the first period after the collapse of the dictatorship regime  (1974-1981). Apart from the repertoire of demands, special attention will be  given to the assertive means and actions taken by these associations, and  especially to the possible alliances they formed with other social groups. The  discourse and the ideological schemata underpinning the arguments that these  associations formulate in their attempts to achieve their goals will also be  considered.
 Dimitris A. Sotiropoulos and  Katerina Loukidou: “Relationships between the Greek State and ‘civil society’  (1974-1981)” This study is based on  selected cases of associations in an attempt to explore the multidimensional  relationships between the Greek State and ‘civil society’ in the period  1974-1981. It seeks to examine the ways in which the government, local  authorities and politicians react to the growing demands of ‘civil society’. In  addition, it will consider the relationships between political authorities and  ‘civil society’ from an institutional perspective, the state’s legislative initiatives that set  the framework of operation of ‘civil society’, and the extent to which this  framework affected the forms of social organisation and public intervention of  the different social groups.
 Yiannis Karayiannis and Katerina Loukidou: “‘Civil  society’ in the daily press, 1974-1981”This case study explores how  newspapers with different ideological and political orientations (Ta Nea, Rizospastis, Kathimerini and Makedonia) depict the Greek  ‘civil society’. Specifically, it will examine why some associations are cited  more frequently in the press than others and   enhance the interpretative schemata used to describe the activities of  various social groups.
 Katerina Rozakou, “Voluntary associations for relief  to immigrants: an ethnographic approach to public sociality in early 21st-century  Athens” The study focuses on two voluntary associations currently offering  relief to immigrants in Athens and which have different social and  organisational characteristics, history and ideological origins. Adopting the  ethnographic approach, the study examines the cultural terms of the production  of public sociality, the meanings and political content of social relations, as  well as the alternative meanings of ‘citizenship’. Furthermore, the study  correlates the micro-level of sociality in the context of the associations with  the discourses on ‘civil society’ that increase during this period.
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