- Volume
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v. 19 : 1996 ISBN 9780762300464
Description
This is part of a series of original articles on research in social movements, conflicts and change. The papers are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
- Nationalism, globalization and civil society in Croatia and Slovenia, Paul Stubbs
- the question of multiethnic states - the case of the Balkans, Harvey Clark Greisman
- evolution of the contemporary US women's movement, Rachel A. Rosenfeld and Kathryn B. Ward
- the institutionalizing work of contemporary antiviolence against women campaigns in the United States - mesolevel social movement activism and the production of cultural forms, Kendal L. Broad and Valerie Jenness
- building a unified movement - resource mobilization, media work and organizational transformation in the Italian environmentalist movement, Paolo R.Donatti
- ovecoming the "NIMBY" label - rhetorical and organizational links for local protestors, Cynthia Gordon and James M. Jasper
- sustainable development, collective action and new social movements, Michele Piccolomini
- "if peasants build their own dams, what would the state have left to do?", the practices of a new social movement in India, Manisha Desai
- does peace lobbying make a difference? arms-control votes in the US House of Representatives, 1986-1988, John MacDougall et al
- structural influences on popular support for social movement activity, Rory McVeigh.
- Volume
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v. 20 : 1997 ISBN 9780762302529
Description
This is the 20th volume in a series of research articles in social movements, conflicts and change. The papers are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
- Who makes revolutions? Class, gender, and race in the Mexican, Cuban, and Nicaraguan revolutions, John Foran, Linda Klouzal, and Jean-Pierre Rivera
- employee involvement in America - the 1930s and the 1980s, Robert Drago
- operation rescue, vocabularies of motive and tactical action - a study of movement framing in the practice of quasi-nonviolence, Victoria Johnson
- defining forms of successful state repression of social movement organizations - a case study of the FBI's COINTELPRO and the American Indian movement, Michael Carley
- legitimacy and the decline of the 1920s Ku Klux Klan, Michael M. Jessup
- can identify theory better explain the rescue of Jews in Nazi Europe than rational actor theory?, Karl-Dieter Opp.
- Volume
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v. 21 : 1999 ISBN 9780762304509
Description
This work is part of a series of original articles on research in social movements, conflicts and change. It carries papers that are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Politics of categorization: class, gender, nation, and the patriarchal narration in an ethnic minority community, Taiwan (Kang Chao). Ideology and organization in the oppositional movements of Taiwan and South Korea (Yin-wah Chu). Ethnicity and state breakdown: legal mobilization and constitutional innovation in the former Soviet Union (D.V. Waller). Between adaptation and confrontation.: the East German ruling classes in the process of transformation (V. Kreissig et al.). The liturgical social movement in the Vatican II Catholic Church (M.J. McCallion, D.R. Maines). The political process model and the 1974 Ethiopian revolution (Alem Seghed Kebede, D.L. Yates). Brawny and brainy branches of western knowledge: social change and the growing defenses against Unheimlichkeit in a world the size of our earth (G. Kutsch). Ethnic mobilization in Quebec, federalism in Canada and the global economy (M.O. Rousseau). Movement frames and the cultural environment: resonance, failure, and the boundaries of the legitimate (R.H. Williams, T.J. Kubal). Social control and the Native American: the nineteenth-century manual labor boarding school (J.R. McDade). Political consciousness, identity, and social movements: peasant women in the Philippines and Filipino immigrant activists in Chicago (L. Lindio-McGovern). About the contributors. Author index. Subject index.
- Volume
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v. 22 : 2000 ISBN 9780762306657
Description
The contents of this volume reflect the multiple foci that have historically defined the series. We present here two papers on methodological issues facing the study of social movements, four papers on specific social movements or social movement organizations (including two on environmental movements), two papers on aspects of social change and inequality, and one study critically analyzing the conflict resolution prospects in a situation of protracted violence.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Methods and the Study of Social Movements. Methods, movements and outcomes: methodological difficulties in the study of extra-movement outcomes (J. Earl). In newspapers we trust? Assessing the credibility of news sources that cover protest campaigns (E. Swank). Case Studies in Social Movements. Framing the nonproliferation debate: transnational activism and international nuclear weapons negotiations (J. Smith). Mega hog farms in the Texas Panhandle region: corporate actions and local resistance (A. Bonanno, D.H. Constance). Coalition work among environmental groups: who participates? (M.B. Shaffer). Technology, honesty, and work: the Peruvian small-scale industrialists, 1971-1992 (O. Celle de Bowman). Social Inequalities and Social Change. Ethnic economies and social policy (S.J. Gold, I. Light). Labor market segmentation and the cultural division of labor in the copper mining industry, 1880-1920 (T. Boswell, J. Brueggemann). Palestinian Islamism and Israeli-Palestinian peace (R. Reuveny).
- Volume
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v. 26 ISBN 9780762312634
Description
Over the past decade social movement scholarship has reflected the robust nature of many of the movements themselves. Innovative lines of inquiry and new theoretical frameworks have opened up to reinvigorate the field. This volume reflects this welcome trend. The volume opens with two papers analyzing tactical and strategic innovations in movement organizing. One establishes that the woman's suffrage movement relied on both outsider (contentious) politics and insider (institutionalized) politics, while the other addresses the promises and pitfalls of transitional social movements that organize through the Internet. Another area of recently invigorated research is on the repression of social movements, and this volume includes two such papers. Mobilization concerns associated with political protest in high-risk settings are empirically addressed in one paper while the other contributes to the policing of protest literature by critically analyzing the costs to movements of arrests. Using newspaper coverage of social movements for events data has risen lately thanks in part to the Internet and new software. We include two papers that reflect this trend and which address emerging methodological concerns associated with it. Perhaps the most fertile area of social movement research examines the increasingly complex and busy intersection of collective identity issues with social movement membership and mobilization. Thus we close this volume with three papers representing this new theorizing. "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" continues it distinguished tradition of reflecting recent trends in social movement scholarship while also contributing to new theorizing.
Table of Contents
Introduction. (P.G. Coy). Part I: Tactical and Strategic Innovations in Social Movement Organizing. Specialists and Generalists: Learning Strategies in the Woman Suffrage Movement, 1866-1918. (B.G. King, M. Cornwall). Transnational Activism in the Americas: the Internet and Innovations in the Repertoire of Contention. (J.M. Ayres). Part II: Political Repression and Social Movements. Multi-Sectoral Coalitions and Popular Movement Participation. (P.D. Almeida). "You Can Beat the Rap, But You Cant Beat the Ride:" Bringing Arrests Back in to Research on Repression. (J. Earl). Part III: Selecting and Silencing in the Newspaper Coverage of Social Movements. Addressing the Selection Bias in Media Coverage of Strikes: A Comparison of Mainstream and Specialty Print Media. (A.W. Martin). Wilderness or Working Forest? British Columbia Forest Policy Debate in the Vancouver Sun, 1991-2003. (M.C.J. Stoddart). Part IV: Identity and Empowerment Issues in Social Movements. We Don't Agree: Collective Identity Justification Work in Social Movement Organizations. (B. Robnett). Construction of Relationship Frames in the Aboriginal Rights Support Movement: The Articulation of Solidarity with the Lubicon Cree of Northern Canada. (N. Funk-Unrau). The Possibility of Personal Empowerment in Dispute Resolution: Habermas, Foucault and Community Mediation. (J. Agusti-Panareda).
- Volume
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v. 27 ISBN 9780762313181
Description
This volume of "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" contains a strong collection of theoretically rich and data-driven papers, which address a series of interrelated questions that are at the forefront of todays social movement scholarship. For example, political opportunity theory has been justly criticized for privileging structure over agency, politics over culture, and for failing to adequately specify how political opportunities differ for social movements in democracies vs. in non-democracies. In this volume, political opportunity theory receives careful, empirically-informed correctives from a number of quarters. In addition, a synthesis is achieved between nonviolent action scholarship and the contentious politics school of research. Equally important, the roles of collective identities, ideologies, identity talk, art, biographies, social networks, police repression, and participation pathways are analyzed within the context of social movements in the United States, Mexico, the Netherlands, India, Brazil, Northern Ireland, and in various non-democracies. This is that too rare collection which when taken together builds bridges between scholarship on social movements and on social conflicts, and in the process makes theoretical advances in each area in much needed yet creative ways. In that way, this volume carries on the distinguished tradition of the Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change series.
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTIONPatrick G. CoyPART I: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN NORTHERN IRELANDFROM CIVIL WAR TO CIVIL RIGHTS AND BACK AGAIN: THE INTERRELATION OF REBELLION AND PROTEST IN NORTHERN IRELAND, 1955-1972 Gregory M. ManeySOCIAL MOVEMENT PARTICIPATION AND THE A"TIMINGA" OF INVOLVEMENT: THE CASE OF THE NORTHERN IRELAND CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. Lorenzo BosiPOLICE KNOWLEDGE REVISED: INSIGHTS FROM THE POLICING OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN NORTHERN IRELANDGianluca De FazioPART II: POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES AND POLITICAL CULTURESRETHINKING NONVIOLENT ACTION AND CONTENTIOUS POLITICS: POLITICAL CULTURES OF NONVIOLENT OPPOSITION IN THE INDIAN INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT AND BRAZIL'S LANDLESS WORKERS MOVEMENTSean Chabot and Stellan VinthagenA LONG, HARD SLOG: POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES, SOCIAL NETWORKS AND THE MOBILIZATION OF DISSENT IN NON-DEMOCRACIESMaryjane Osa and Kurt SchockSTRATEGIC WOMEN, ELITE ADVOCACY AND INSIDER STRATEGIES: THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT AND CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM IN WALESPaul ChaneyPART III: IDENTITIES, IDEOLOGIES, AND SOCIAL MOVEMENT PARTICIPATIONIDEOLOGY, ORGANIZATION, AND BIOGRAPHY: THE CULTURAL CONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITY TALK AMONG PROGRESSIVE ACTIVISTS IN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT Stephen ValocchiART AND IDENTITY IN MEXICAN AND CHICANO SOCIAL MOVEMENTSEdward J. McCaughanNEW FRONTIERS FOR IDENTITY POLITICS? THE POTENTIAL AND PITFALLS OF PATIENT AND CIVIC IDENTITY IN THE DUTCH PATIENTS' HEALTH MOVEMENT Jan Willem Duyvendak and Trudi NederlandPATHS TO PARTICIPATION: A PROFILE OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS-ERA KU KLUX KLANDavid Cunningham
- Volume
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v. 30 ISBN 9780857240361
Description
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change seeks to encourage dialogue and cross-fertilization across a number of related but too disconnected research literatures: social movements, conflict resolution, and social and political change. This volume showcases deeply empirical and often multi-method research by senior and junior scholars alike. Divided into three sections, the first section casts a spotlight on the institution that the RSMCC series exists within and primarily serves: higher education. Papers in the middle section are linked by their investigation of the dynamics of political protest. The volume concludes with three papers linked by their various connections to the theoretical framework of frame analysis in social movements research. Topics discussed include: framing illegal immigration at the U.S.-Mexican Border; movement publications as data; social networks and social protest; and the ethics of social movement research in a post-9/11 political climate. Comparative case analysis and qualitative studies push into new theoretical territories in this illuminating and important research which helps define and advance the multiple fields reflected in the series title.
Table of Contents
Introduction - Patrick G. Coy Part I Spotlights on the Academy It's Part of My BeingA": Demand-Making and Discursive Protest by Feminist Sociologists Inside Academia, Heather Laube Risks and Ethics of Social Movement Research in a Changing Political Climate, Kathleen M. Blee and Tim Vining Part II The Politics of Public Protest The Impacts of Repression: The Effect of Police Presence and Action on Subsequent Protest Rates, Jennifer S. Earl and Sarah A. Soule On Social Networks and Social Protest: Understanding the Role of Organizational and Personal Ties in Large-Scale Protest Events Dana R. Fisher Legal Dissent: Constitutional Proposals for CambioA" in Cuba, Ana Christina Moldonado Bridging Contentious and Electoral Politics: Moveon and the Digital Revolution, Victoria Carty Part III Extending Framing Theory in Multiple Directions Framing Illegal Immigration at the U.S.-Mexican Border: Anti-Illegal Immigration Groups and the Importance of Place in Framing April Lee Dove The Dilemma of Differential Mobilization: Framing Strategies and Shaping Engagement in the Occupation of Alcatraz Christopher Wetzel Movement Publications as Data: An Assessment of an Underutilized Resource Andrew W. Martin
- Volume
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v. 31 ISBN 9780857246097
Description
This latest volume in the "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" series contains three sections of data-driven articles that address topics central to scholarship on social movements and conflict resolution. Section One contains two papers on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, one focused on the Arab Israeli Land Day campaign and its implications for political process theory, while the other analyzes the emotional landscape of the long-running Women in Black vigils. Section Two contains four papers linked by their treatment of tactical and strategic issues associated with gender-based and gay and lesbian social movements, organizations, and their campaigns and activities. The two articles in Section Three treat themes associated with the complex intersection of identity formation and mobilization. As has long been the RSMCC series tradition, Volume 31 showcases top-level, original, and multi-method research on a variety of movements, organizations and conflicts in ways that contribute to theory-building.
Table of Contents
List of Contributors.
Introduction.
Emotion maps of participation in protest: The case of women in black against the occupation in Israel.
Learning from failures: why and how "scale shift" failed to launch - evidence from the case of the Israeli-Arab land day.
The pitfalls of winning: a comparison of two first-wave feminist organizations.
Implicit politics in a free and open space: belly dance, leisure activity, and gender identity.
Dominant tactics in social movement tactical repertoires: Anti-gay ballot measures, 1974-2008.
Mobilizing in the shadow of the law: lesbian and gay rights in the aftermath of Bowers v. Hardwick.
Freedom summer abroad: Biographical pathways and cosmopolitanism among international human rights workers.
The making of organic indigenous-campesino intellectuals: catechist training in the diocese of San Cristobal and the roots of the Zapatista uprising.
All the news that's fit to print? Silence and voice in mainstream and ethnic press accounts of African American protest.
About the Authors.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
>Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Copyright page.
- Volume
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v. 4 : 1981 ISBN 9780892322343
Description
"Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" was established in 1977 by founding editor, Louis Kriesberg, the Maxwell Professor of Social Conflict Studies at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. His vision was to create a scholarly publication outlet that would encourage dialogue and cross-fertilization across a number of related but too disconnected research literatures: social movements, conflict resolution, and social and political change. For more than 30 years RSMCC has been publishing peer-reviewed, top-level empirical and theoretical research that has helped define and advance the multiple fields reflected in the series title. Among the many superb scholars who have contributed to "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" are Elise Boulding, John Burton, Amitai Etzioni, Myra Marx Ferree, John Foran, Johan Galtung, William Gamson, Andre Gunder Frank, Craig Jenkins, Lester Kurtz, John Lofland, Jane Mansbridge, Doug McAdam, John D.
McCarthy, Alberto Melucci, Christopher Mitchell, Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Pamela Oliver, Karl Dieter Opp, Sarah Soule, Suzanne Staggenborg, Jackie Smith, David Snow, Verta Taylor, Charles Tilly, and Mayer Zald. "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" has been hosted by the Center for Applied Conflict Management at Kent State University, USA, and edited by the Center Director and Associate Professor, Patrick G. Coy, since 2000.
- Volume
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v. 7 : 1984 ISBN 9780892324965
Description
"Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" was established in 1977 by founding editor Louis Kriesberg, the Maxwell Professor of Social Conflict Studies at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. His vision was to create a scholarly publication outlet that would encourage dialogue and cross-fertilization across a number of related but too disconnected research literatures: social movements, conflict resolution, and social and political change. For more than 30 years RSMCC has been publishing peer-reviewed, top-level empirical and theoretical research that has helped define and advance the multiple fields reflected in the series title. Among the many superb scholars who have contributed to "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" are Elise Boulding, John Burton, Amitai Etzioni, Myra Marx Ferree, John Foran, Johan Galtung, William Gamson, Andre Gunder Frank, Craig Jenkins, Lester Kurtz, John Lofland, Jane Mansbridge, Doug McAdam, John D.
McCarthy, Alberto Melucci, Christopher Mitchell, Sharon Erickson Nepstad, Pamela Oliver, Karl Dieter Opp, Sarah Soule, Suzanne Staggenborg, Jackie Smith, David Snow, Verta Taylor, Charles Tilly, and Mayer Zald. "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" has been hosted by the Center for Applied Conflict Management at Kent State University, USA, and edited by the Center Director and Associate Professor, Patrick G. Coy, since 2000.
- Volume
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v. 15 : 1993 ISBN 9781559385220
Description
This series offers a new approach to organizational behaviour, integrating theoretical considerations and critical literature review. This volume discusses such topics as: the contracts of individuals and organizations; and the impact of demographics on work team old-timers and newcomers.
Table of Contents
- Preface, L.L. Cummings and Barry M. Staw
- the contracts of individuals and organizations, Denise M. Rousseau and Judi McLean parks
- socialization amidst diversity - the impact of demographics on work team oldtimers and newcomers, Susan E. Jackson, et al
- the "Learning Bureaucracy" - new United Motor Manufacturing Inc., Paul S. Adler
- the making of organizational opportunities - an interpretive pathway to organizational change,k Jane E. Dutton
- organizational impression management as a reciprocal influence process - the neglected role of the organizational audience, Linda E. Ginzel, et al
- a goal hierarchy model of personality, motivation and leadership, Russell Cropanzano, et al
- economic and behavioural perspectives on safety, Alfred Marcus, et al
- cross-level analysis of organizations - social resource management model, P. Christopher Earley and Jack Britain.
- Volume
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v. 16 : 1993 ISBN 9781559386548
Description
This is part of a series of original articles on research in social movements, conflicts and change. The papers are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
- Psychiatric conceptions of mental illness among immigrants and African Americans in 19th- and early 20th-century and American history, Mary Ann Jiminez
- rural migrants, Islam and revolution in Iran, Mohammed Amjad
- migration, inequality and the informal economy - a critique of Eurocentric explanations of rural out-migration in the Third World, Abol Hassan Danesh
- the role of West Indian slavery during the initial phase of France's transition to capitalism, Clarence J. Munford
- the destruction of Jewish everyday life in Nazi Germany - the marginalization and oppression of the German-Jewish community before the Holocaust, Gunter W. Remmling
- Birmingham during the industrial revolution - class conflict or class cooperation, Eric Hopkins
- protective discrimination for backward classes in India - sociological and legal dimensions, Rajendra Pandey.
- Volume
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v. 17 : 1994 ISBN 9781559388900
Description
This is part of a series of original articles on research in social movements, conflicts and change. The papers are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
- Protest demonstrations and the end of Communist regimes in 1989, Anthony Oberschall
- post generational theory and post-Communist youth in East-Central Europe, John D. Nagle
- a dynamic view of resources - evidence from the Iranian revolution, Charles Kurzman
- strategy and identity in 1960s Black Forest, Francesca Polietta
- action and consensus mobilization in the Deaf President Now protest and its aftermath, Sharon N. Barnartt
- the institutional structuring of organized social action, 1955-1985, Debra C. Minkoff
- on studying the cycles in social movement, Andre Gunder Frank and Marta Fuentes
- resistance to resettlement - the formation and evolution of movements, Anthony Oliver-Smith
- expansion of the informal state and disempowerment of grass-roots activism - a case study, Neghin Modavi
- social movements and social problems - toward a conceptual rapprochement, Harry H. Bash.
- Volume
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v. 18 : 1995 ISBN 9781559389471
Description
This is part of a series of original articles on research in social movements, conflicts and change. The papers are broad in scope and methodologically diverse.
Table of Contents
- The paradoxes of modernization in eastern Europe: the Bulgarian case, Georgi Dimitrov
- Social movements and institutional change in Poland and Russia, Melanie Tatur
- System transformation in East germany and in the reform countries of Central and Eastern Europe: deindustrialization in technology, Volkmar Kressig, Erhard Schreiber
- Privatization: a case study in the Hungarian clothing industry, Eckhart J. Dittrich, Michael Haferkemper
- The revolt of the intellectuals: the Prague spring and the politics of reform communism, Jerome Karabel
- The comparative study of social movements and democratization: political interaction and political process approaches, Ron Pagnucco
- Transnational political processes and the Human Rights movement, Jackie Smith
- The new class and the structure of contemporary political dissidence, J. Craig Jenkins, Michael Wallance
- The House of Representatives' Vote on the Gulf War, 1991: measuring peace movement impact, John MacDougall et al
- The failure of green academics to take root in democratic soil: a reply to Christa Daryl Slaton, William H. Keyser
- About the contributors.
- Volume
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v. 36 ISBN 9781781907320
Description
This latest volume in the august Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change series carries on a long tradition of featuring only the best data-driven and multi-method research upon which useful theory can be painstakingly built. Part one focuses on old and new media platforms and their intersections with mobilization issues, highlighting protest websites and the US Tea Party movement. Part two investigates the roles elites play in advancing movement campaigns for increased rights and decreased inequalities in the US and Peru. The third section spotlights best and worst practices in conflict transformation and peacebuilding ventures in Croatia and Israel/Palestine, while the fourth section interrogates the use of consensus building processes in Local Social Forums and in the Occupy Movement. Finally, on the 50th anniversary of the publication of Neil Smelser's A Theory of Collective Behavior, we close with a creative combining of Smelser's structural functionalist approach with social identity models for understanding crowd behaviors in the context of university party riots.
Table of Contents
List of Contributors.
Introduction.
Spreading the Word or Shaping the Conversation: "Prosumption" in Protest Websites.
Media, Movements, and Mobilization: Tea Party Protests in the United States, 2009-2010.
Strategic Action Fields and the Context of Political Entrepreneurship: How Disability Rights Became Part of the Policy Agenda.
Inconsistency in Policy Elites' Support for Movement Claims: Feminist Advocacy in two Regions of Peru.
Pathologies in peacebuilding: Donors, NGOs, and community peacebuilding in Croatia.
Organizational Adaptation and Survival in a Hostile and Unfavorable Environment: Peacebuilding Organizations in Israel and Palestine.
Learning Consensus Decision-Making in Occupy: Uncertainty, Responsibility, Commitment.
Practices of Local Social Forums: The Building of Tactical and Cultural Collective Action Repertoires.
You have to Fight! For your Right! To Party! Structure, Culture, and Mobilization in a University Party Riot.
About the Authors.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Copyright page.
- Volume
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v. 38 ISBN 9781785603594
Description
A long-standing characteristic of the Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change series is publishing new theoretical and empirical work that connects previously disparate sub-fields. This volume continues that tradition by opening with five papers that join social movements research with organizational theory, new institutionalism, strategic action fields, and nonviolent action. One study does this by examining how the Fenian Brotherhood organized a transnational revolutionary movement for Ireland's independence. Another paper analyzes the strategic relations between conservative, moderate and radical organizations in different movements, while a further study zeroes in on nonviolent action campaigns. One chapter examines how the North American SlutWalk campaign responded to the organizational field by strategically adapted their framing to make it more resonant transnationally. Other chapters examine how LGBT organizational presence influences the passage of hate crime legislation, and how the women's movement in Franco's Spain persevered through repression and abeyance partly due to cultural practices.
Table of Contents
Transnational Nationalism: Strategic Action Fields and the Organization of the Fenian Movement.
Transnational Field and Frames: Organizations in Ecuador and the US.
Waves of Contention: Relations among Radical, Moderate, and Conservative Movement Organizations.
A Quantitative Reevaluation of Radical Flank Effects within Nonviolent Campaigns.
"No Shaming This Slut": Strategic Frame Adaptation and North American SlutWalk Campaigns.
Home Is Where Activism Thrives: Community Setting and Persistent Protest Participation.
Humor, Collective Identity, and Framing in the New Atheist Movement.
How Social Movements Matter: Including Sexual Orientation in State-Level Hate Crime Legislation.
Social Movements in Abeyance in Non-Democracies: The Women's Movement in Franco's Spain.
About the Authors.
Introduction.
List of Contributors.
Copyright page.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
- Volume
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v. 42 ISBN 9781787568969
Description
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change has now published continuously for over 40 years, and this volume continues its tradition of delivering data-driven and multi-method research by scholars who constantly push theory forward.
Covering a compelling range of subjects, this important collection begins by addressing the critically important dimensions of the relationships that social movements, their activists, and their organizations have with the state and other institutions. It then moves on to examine three movements linked by frame and discourse analysis, before concluding with a survey of the biographical trajectory of activism. The contributions focus on a number of topical and crucially important issues, including, among others: environmental activism in China, the Black Lives Matter movement, the 2011 uprising in Tunisia, and Russian opposition movements.
With a strong contributor team and a confident style, this volume is a significant addition to the RSMCC series and will be of great interest to those working and researching within the social movement field.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1. Allies in Action: Institutional Actors and Grassroots Environmental Activism in China
- Yang ZhangChapter 2. A Tale of Two Bike Lanes: Consensus Movements and Infrastructure Delivery
- Kathryn Gasparro
Chapter 3. When do Political Parties Move to the Streets? Party Protest in Chile (2000-2012)
- Nicolas M. Somma
Chapter 4. Building Solidarity across Asymmetrical Risks: Israeli and Palestinian Peace Activists
- Michelle I. Gawerc
Chapter 5. Frame Resonance, Tactical Innovation, and Poor People in the Tunisian Uprising
- Mohammad Yaghi
Chapter 6. Black Lives Matter: (Re)Framing the Next Wave of Black Liberation
- Amanda D. Clark, Prentiss A. Dantzler & Ashley E. Nickels Chapter 7. Challenging Everyday Violence of the State: Developing Sustained Opposition Movements through Anti-Corruption Protests
- Alexandra V. Orlova
Chapter 8. Volunteer Retention, Burnout and Dropout in Online Voluntary Organizations: Stress, Conflict and Retirement of Wikipedians
- Piotr Konieczny
Chapter 9. Late Bloomers: Differential Participation among First-Time, Mid-Life Protesters
- Winston B. Tripp & Danielle N. Gage
- Volume
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v. 28 ISBN 9781846638923
Description
Social movement strategies and coalition dynamics in movements are two of the hottest arenas for cutting-edge research. Many case studies offer useful analytical windows through which we can understand the strategic choices made by individual movement organizations. Equally if not more important questions remain about how the positions a movement organization occupies in the broader social movement field impacts strategic decision-making. Coalition politics and conflicts matter to social movements.Thus Section One of this volume of "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" presents a series of papers focused on the complex dynamics of coalitions and the interorganizational relations within social movements. Another section follows immediately that compliments in an integrated way the first, this one focused on strategic decision making in social movements, including with regard to strategic alliances. The Volume closes with a third section on political opportunities and political inequalities. This volume of the "Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change" does what the series has always done best: showcase sound empirical work and creative theory-building that addresses those questions currently at the forefront of the field.
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTIONPatrick G. CoyPART I: COALITION DYNAMICS IN SOCIAL MOVEMENTSLINKING STRATEGIC CHOICE WITH MACRO-ORGANIZATIONAL DYNAMICS: STRATEGY AND SOCIAL MOVEMENT ARTICULATION Dennis J. Downey and Deana A. RohlingerCOALITION DISSOLUTION, MOBILIZATION, AND NETWORK DYNAMICS IN THE U.S. ANTIWAR MOVEMENTMichael T. Heaney and Fabio RojasSOCIAL MOVEMENT ORGANIZATIONS AND COALITIONS: COMPARISONS FROM THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT IN BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINAElizabeth BorlandMESOMOBILIZATION AND FRAGILE COALITIONS: ABORIGINAL POLITICS AND TREATY-MAKING IN BRITISH COLUMBIAR.S. Ratner and Andrew WoolfordTHE LIVING WAGE MOVEMENT AND THE ECONOMICS OF MORALITY:FRAMES, IDEOLOGY AND THE DISCURSIVE FIELDShehzad NadeemPART II: STRATEGIC ALLIANCES AND STRATEGIC DECISION MAKING IN SOCIAL MOVEMENTSPROFESSIONAL AND POLITICAL ALLIANCES, LEGITIMATING AUTHORITY AND THE LONGEVITY OF HEALTH MOVEMENT ORGANIZATIONSMatthew E. Archibald and Kendralin J. FreemanOPPOSING MOVEMENT STRATEGIES IN U.S. ABORTION POLITICSDavid S. Meyer and Suzanne StaggenborgWHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT DECLINE:COMPETING NARRATIVES IN THE AMSTERDAM SQUATTERS' MOVEMENTLynn OwensPART III: POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES AND POLITICAL INEQUALITIESRESTRICTING PUBLIC LIFE, CREATING DEADLY STRIFE:HOW POLITICAL DISCRIMINATION IMPACTS INTERETHNIC CONFLICTClayton D. Peoples and Tina Hsu SchweizerSTARVING FOR CHANGE: THE HUNGER STRIKE AND NONVIOLENT ACTION, 1906 - 2004 Stephen J. Scanlan, Laurie Cooper Stoll and Kimberly Lumm
by "Nielsen BookData"