%0 Journal Article %T #Occupy: Strategic Dilemmas, Lessons Learned? %A David J. Bailey %J Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies (JCGS) %D 2012 %I Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies %X What is #Occupy? For William Connolly, it is ¡®better described¡¯ as ¡®the 99% movement¡¯ (Connolly, 2011). But even this is potentially too narrow as it refers only to those explicitly adopting the 99% slogan. In the UK, the ¡®Uncut¡¯ movement has arguably gained more traction. Outside of the Anglo-sphere, we witness the Spanish indignados , and the General Strikes in Greece, along with related demonstrations in Syntagma Square. There is, then, on the one hand a narrowly-defined #Occupy movement, and on the other hand a more broadly defined movement seeking to challenge ¨C through popular mobilisation, direct action, and/or civil disobedience ¨C the austerity measures that are being introduced in the wake of the post-2007 global economic crisis. In each case, we witness the strategy of occupation as a means of highlighting popular dissatisfaction; of presenting an illustration of the disruptive potential of the dissatisfied; and of prefiguring modes of social organisation preferable to those being opposed. If we focus too narrowly on the #Occupy movement as the form of mobilised, extra parliamentary, resistance to the current restructuring of advanced industrial democracies, then there is a risk that we lose sight of the broader movement of which this is a part. %K Occupation %K Social Movements %K Social Organisation %U http://www.criticalglobalisation.com/issue5/138_142_STRATEGIC_DILEMMAS_JCGS5.pdf