This superb historical and ethnographic study of the political economy
of the Vega Baja region of Spain, one of the European Union's "Regional
Economies," takes up the difficult question of how to understand the
growing alienation ordinary working people feel in the face of
globalization. Combining rich oral histories with a sophisticated and
nuanced structural understanding of changing political economies, the
authors examine the growing divide between government and its citizens
in a region that has in the last four decades been transformed from a
primarily agricultural economy to a primarily industrial one. Offering a
new form of ethnography appropriate for the study of suprastate polities
and a globalized economy, Immediate Struggles contributes to our
understanding of one region as well as the way we think about changing
class relations, modes of production, and cultural practices in a newly
emerging Europe. The authors also consider how phenomena such as the
"informal economy" and "black market" are not marginal to the normal
operation of state and economic institutions but are intertwined with
both.