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Social Movements
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Table of Contents

Preface to the second edition.

1. The Study of Social Movements: Recurring Questions, (Partially) Changing Answers.

1.1. Four Core Questions for Social Movement Analysis.

1.1.1. Is social change creating the conditions for the emergence of new movements?

1.1.2. How do we define issues as worthy objects, and actors as worthy subjects of collective action?

1.1.3. How is collective action possible?

1.1.4. What determines the forms and intensity of collective action?

1.1.5. Are these questions specific of social movement analysis?

1.2. What is Distinctive of Social Movements?

1.2.1. The concept of social movement.

1.2.2. Conflictual and consensual collective action.

1.2.3. Social movements, events, and coalitions.

1.2.4. Social movements and organizational processes.

1.2.5. Social movements and protest.

1.3. On This Book.

2. Social Changes and Social Movements.

2.1 Social Structure, Political Cleavages and Collective Action.

2.1.1 Economic change, social fragmentation and movements.

2.1.2. Economic globalization and social conflict.

2.2 States, markets, and social movements.

2.2.1. Territorial boundaries and social conflicts: the transnationalization of protest.

2.2.2. State and classes: the conflicts around the welfare state.

2.3 Knowledge, Culture and Conflicts.

2.3.1. Shifting boundaries between the public and the private:

2.3.2. Cultures and countercultures.

2.3.3. Between the global and the local.

2.4. Structural Transformations, New Conflicts, New Classes.

2.4.1. Still classes?

2.4.2. New middle classes for new social movements?

2.5 Summary.

3. The Symbolic Dimension of Collective Action.

3.1. Culture and Action: The Role of Values.

3.2. Culture and Action: The Cognitive Perspective.

3.2.1. Collective action as cognitive praxis.

3.2.2. Interpretative frames and ideology.

3.2.3. Sense making activities: linking values and frames.

3.3. Problems and Responses.

3.4. Summary.

4. Collective Action and Identity.

4.1 How Does Identity Work?

4.2 Multiple Identities.

4.3 Does Identity Facilitate Participation?

4.4 How Is Identity Generated and Reproduced?

4.4.1 Self- and hetero-definitions of identity.

4.4.2 Production of identity: symbols, practices, rituals.

4.4.3 Identity and the political process.

4.5 Summary.

5. Individuals, networks, and participation.

5.1. Why do People Get Involved in Collective Action? The Role of Networks.

5.2. Do Networks Always Matter?

5.3. Individuals and Organizations.

5.3.1 Exclusive affiliations.

5.3.2. Multiple affiliations.

5.4. Individual participation, movement subcultures, and virtual networks.

5.5 Summary.

6. Social Movements and Organizations.

6.1. Organizational Dilemmas in Social Movements.

6.1.1. Mobilizing people or resources?

6.1.2. Hierarchical or horizontal structures?

6.1.3. Challengers or ‘service providers’?

6.2. Types of social movement organizations.

6.2.1. Professional movement organizations.

6.2.2. Participatory movement organizations.

6.3. How do social movement organizations change?

6.3.1. Patterns of change.

6.3.2. Institutional factors and organizational change.

6.3.3. Organizational cultures and organizational change.

6.3.4. Modernization, technological innovation, and organizational change.

6.4. From movement organizations to social movement networks.

6.5 Summary.

7. Action Forms, Repertoires and Cycles of Protest.

7.1 Protest: A Definition.

7.2 Repertoires of Action.

7.3. The Logics and Forms of Protest.

7.3.1 The logic of numbers.

7.3.2 The logic of damage.

7.3.3 The logic of bearing witness.

7.4 Strategic Options and Protest.

7.5 Factors Influencing Repertoire Choice.

7.6 The Cross-national Diffusion of Protest.

7.7. Cycles of Protest, Protest Wave and Protest Campaigns.

7.8. Summary.

8. The Policing of Protest and Political Opportunities for Social Movements.

8.1 The Policing of Protest.

8.2. Political Institutions and Social Movements.

8.3. Prevailing Strategies and Social Movements.

8.4. Allies, Opponents and Social Movements.

8.4.1. Social movements in a multiorganizational field.

8.4.2. Social movements and parties.

8.5. Discursive Opportunity and the Media System.

8.5.1. Discursive opportunities.

8.5.2. Media and movements.

8.6 Summary.

9. Social Movements and Democracy.

9.1 Social Movement Strategies and Their Effects.

9.2 Changes in Public Policy.

9.3 Social Movements and Procedural Changes.

9.4. Social Movement and Democratic Theory.

9.5. Social movements and democratization.

9.6 Summary.

References.

Index.

About the Author

Donatella della Porta is Professor of Sociology in the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the European University Institute. She is the author of Corrupt Exchanges: Actors, Resources, and Mechanisms of Political Corruption (1999), and Transnational Protest and Global Activism (2004).


Mario Diani is Professor of Sociology and Director of Graduate Studies at the University of Trento. He is the coeditor of Beyond Tocqueville: The Social Capital Debate in Comparative Perspective (with Bob Edwards and Michael Foley, 2001) and Social Movements and Networks (with Doug McAdam, 2003)

Reviews

"A highly sophisticated and deeply insightful account of social movements."
Development and Change
“Della Porta and Diani have crafted an elegant and expansive volume that incisively focuses on all the field’s core issues. Using the global justice movement as the thread that pulls the new edition together is a welcome addition.” Hank Johnston, San Diego State University

“As in the first edition, the authors offer excellent framing of debates and issues in the field and thorough coverage of the literature. This is the most comprehensive text in the field and a must-read for serious students of social movements.” Verta Taylor, University of California, Santa Barbara

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