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         Social Movements:     more books (100)
  1. Globalization and Social Movements: Islamism, Feminism, and the Global Justice Movement by Valentine M. Moghadam, 2008-10-17
  2. The Civil Rights Movement and the Logic of Social Change (Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics) by Joseph E. Luders, 2010-01-25
  3. Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change by Patrick G. Coy, 2011-01-24
  4. States, Parties, and Social Movements (Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics)
  5. Social Movements: Identity, Culture, and the State
  6. Restructuring World Politics: Transnational Social Movements, Networks, And Norms (Social Movements, Protest and Contention) by Sanjeev Khagram, 2002-03-12
  7. New Social Movements in the African Diaspora: Challenging Global Apartheid (Critical Black Studies)
  8. Prophetic Politics: Christian Social Movements And American Democracy by David S. Gutterman, 2006-07-13
  9. Grassroots Resistance: Social Movements in Twentieth Century America by Robert A. Goldberg, 1991-01
  10. Social Justice: Theories, Issues, and Movements (Critical Issues in Crime and Society) by Loretta Capeheart, 2007-05-30
  11. Self, Identity, and Social Movements (Social Movements, Protest and Contention) by Sheldon Stryker, 2000-07-26
  12. Social Movements for Global Democracy (Themes in Global Social Change) by Jackie Smith, 2007-12-31
  13. Passionate Politics: Emotions and Social Movements
  14. Making Islam Democratic: Social Movements and the Post-Islamist Turn (Stanford Studies in Middle Eastern and I) by Asef Bayat, 2007-05-16

61. Education World® : Site Reviews: Women And Social Movements In The United State
January 16, 2000. Women and social movements in the United States, 18301930 http//womhist.binghamton.edu/index.htmlGRADE LEVEL 9-12+ Written By Hazel Jobe.
http://www.education-world.com/awards/past/2000/r0100-08.shtml

Site Reviews
Archives: Alphabetical Listing By Date Listing ...
Vocational

"Best Of" Series
2002 Reviews

2001 Reviews

2000 Reviews

1999 Reviews
... By Date January 16, 2000 S I T E R E V I E W January 16, 2000 Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1830-1930
http://womhist.binghamton.edu/index.html

GRADE LEVEL: 9-12+
Written By: Hazel Jobe CONTENT: This site is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and is intended for classroom use. It offers a collection of online primary documents and supporting materials that will enable "students to connect women's history with themes they are encountering in their American history courses." AESTHETICS: This site's unpretentious appearance does not detract from the attributes of the valuable 300+ documents found here. ORGANIZATION: This site is well organized with easily navigable links. The format of the projects is uniform with a clear statement of the research question, a short introduction, and links to various documents. Users can choose to begin with the introduction or go straight to the document section. An internal search engine allows students to search the site by keywords. REVIEW: Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1830-1930 is series of research projects completed by students at the State University of New York at Binghamton. This is an excellent teaching resource to supplement the U.S. history curriculum. Each project includes a research question, introduction with background, bibliography, list of related Web sites, and 15 to 20 primary documents. This site is an outstanding reference for anyone interested in women's studies. History teachers, especially, will want to add this to their list of most valuable sites.

62. Civicus
. social movements are Sectoral Movements and Require an Instrumentfor Articulation. (Editor's Note This interview was conducted
http://www.civicus.org/cc/portal/index2.cfm?contentid=411&link_url=

63. Topics In Social Movements
Topics in social movements Professor Judith StepanNorris (SocialScience 253J) Spring 1997 This course is designed to acquaint
http://www.democ.uci.edu/democ/courses/s-norris.htm
Topics in Social Movements
Professor Judith Stepan-Norris
(Social Science 253J)
Spring 1997 This course is designed to acquaint you with the field of Social Movements, broadly defined. We begin with a brief look at the origins of the field and early theories and then go on to systematically cover the major theoretical approaches to social movements along with some empirical applications of those theories. COURSE REQUIREMENTS Seminar Participation Research Paper
15-20 pages (double-spaced)
Due June 9 by 10AM (No extensions under normal circumstances) The term paper is to use two or more of the theoretical approaches to social movements covered in class to analyze a social movement of your choice. It is expected that students will conduct research on the movement, pose a problem/issue that is central to it, and write an intelligent essay that juxtaposes how the various approaches would analyze it. It is essential that the essays be argued from students own perspective. In other words, make it clear which perspective you think is best and why. I have assigned John Lofland s Social Movement Organizations , which is a guide to research on social movements. This book will help you get started on your research papers.

64. Research Initiative On Nonprofit Advocacy - Bibliography - Social Movements
Studies and Advocacy Law and Regulations Policy Issues Nonprofit Organizationsand the Policy Process social movements Alphabetical Listing by Author
http://www.urban.org/advocacyresearch/adv-social.html
Advocacy Bibliography
Coalitions and Networks Democracy and Society Funding Advocacy International Studies and Advocacy ... Alphabetical Listing by Author SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Cuoto, Richard A. February, 1993. "Narrative, Free Space, and Political Leadership in Social Movements." The Journal of Politics Dauphinais, Pat Dewey, Steven E. Barkan, and Steven F. Cohn. November, 1992. "Predictors of Rank-and-File Feminist Activism: Evidence from the 1983 General Social Survey." Social Problems Duerst-Lahti, Georgia. 1989. "The Government's Role In Building the Women's Movement." Political Science Quarterly Edwards, Bob and Sam Marullo. December, 1995. "Organizational Mortality in a Declining Social Movement: The Demise of Peace Movement Organizations in the End of the cold War Era." American Sociological Review Jenkins, J. Craig and Craig M. Eckert. December, 1986. "Channeling Black Insurgency: Elite Patronage and Professional Social Movement Organizations in the Development of the Black Movement." American Sociological Review Kesler, John T. Fall, 2000. "The Healthy Community Movement: Seven Counterintuitive Next Steps."

65. Labor And Social Movements In Japan
Labor and social movements in Japan. ? Grassrootsmovements and social movements in Japan a biographical dictionary.
http://www.lib.duke.edu/ias/eac/labor.htm
Duke University Perkins Library East Asian Collection Japanese Studies ... Subject Guides
Labor and Social Movements in Japan
Bibliographies Dictionaries Biographical Dictionaries
Chronologies
... Databases
Bibliographies
  • EA REF: 335.00952 W324 N691 1958

  • Koyama Hirotake
    2 vols: Bunken mokuroku to sono kaisetsu: 1899-1956
  • ŽÐ‰ï‰^“®Žv‘zŠÖŒWŽ‘—¿ˆÄ“à
    Komori Kei
    EA Ref: 016.3553433 K81 S527 1986

  • ŠO‘l˜J“­ŽÒ–â‘蕶Œ£W¬
    EAC: 016.331544 Y19 G137 1995 v.1
  • Buraku mondai bunken mokuroku
    EA Ref: 016.305568 B945 B9 1983

  • •”—ŽŽjŒ¤‹†ƒnƒ“ƒhƒuƒbƒN Kobayashi Shigeru, Akisada Yoshikazu hen. EA Ref: 305.5680952 B945, 1989
  • Zasshi kiji sakuin Duke has the cumulative editions for 1945 to 1985 (call no. Z38), and an online version which indexes approximately 20 Japanese periodicals related to labor as well as numerous historical and sociological journals from 1977 to the present.
  • Dictionaries for Labor/Popular Movements
  • ˜J“­‰^“®Žs–¯‰^“®–@—¥Ž–“TB Otsuki shoten, 1979.
  • 66. OUP USA: Social Movements And Networks
    Comparative Politics Higher Education Examination Copy Request Online Higher EducationComment Card, social movements and Networks Relational Approaches to
    http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0199251789.html

    Politics

    or Browse by Subject
    paper
    In Stock

    Standard

    cloth
    In Stock

    Standard

    Comparative Politics

    Higher Education Examination Copy Request
    ... Online Higher Education Comment Card Social Movements and Networks Relational Approaches to Collective Action Edited by MARIO DIANI and DOUG MCADAM For the first time in a single volume, leading social movement researchers map the full range of applications of network concepts and tools to their field of inquiry. They illustrate how networks affect individual contributions to collective action in both democratic and non-democratic organizations; how patterns of inter-organizational linkages affect the circulation of resources both within movement milieus and between movement organizations and the political system; how network concepts and techniques may improve our grasp of the relationship between movements and elites, of the configuration of alliance and conflict structures, of the clustering of episodes of contention in protest cycles. Social Movements and Networks casts new light on our understanding of social movements and cognate social and political processes.

    67. OUP USA: Social Movements And Networks
    Add to My Basket April 2003 Not Yet Published Due 04/15/03 Tentative S H StandardComparative Politics, social movements and Networks Relational Approaches to
    http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0199251770.html

    Politics

    or Browse by Subject
    cloth
    In Stock

    Standard

    paper
    In Stock

    Standard

    Comparative Politics

    Social Movements and Networks Relational Approaches to Collective Action Edited by MARIO DIANI and DOUG MCADAM For the first time in a single volume, leading social movement researchers map the full range of applications of network concepts and tools to their field of inquiry. They illustrate how networks affect individual contributions to collective action in both democratic and non-democratic organizations; how patterns of inter-organizational linkages affect the circulation of resources both within movement milieus and between movement organizations and the political system; how network concepts and techniques may improve our grasp of the relationship between movements and elites, of the configuration of alliance and conflict structures, of the clustering of episodes of contention in protest cycles. Social Movements and Networks casts new light on our understanding of social movements and cognate social and political processes. New and recent titles of related interest: Political Science Mario Diani is Professor of Sociology at the University of Trento, Italy, and the European Editor of Mobilization. Doug McAdam is Professor of Sociology at Stanford University, and Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.

    68. Bolerium - European Social Movements
    Includes two chapters on the United States. Labor American Utopian movementsand literature European social movements Price $20.00 Cat.No 10579.
    http://www.bolerium.com/cgi-bin/bol48/scan/st=sql/mp=keywords/se=European Social
    Browse by Category Abolitionism Abortion Advertising catalogue Afghanistan AFL-CIO Africa African American Agriculture AIDS Alabama Alaska Albania Alberta Algeria American Civil Liberties Union American Federation of Labor American Indians American Revolution Americana Anarchism Animal Rights Anthropology Anti-Fascist Anti-Semitism Anticatholic Anticommunist Antiques-Craft-Furniture Apartheid Arab Arabia Archaeology Architecture Argentina Arizona Arkansas Armed struggle Armenia Art Art Young Asia Asian American history Assassinations Astronomy Atlantic alliance Atmosphere; weather Atomic energy Australia Australia/New Zealand Austria Autobiography Automobile Aviation Baja California Banking history and economics Banned books baseball Basque Beatniks Ben Shahn Bibliography Bicycle, velocipede, skate Biography Birth Control Black Panthers Blues Bohemia Bolivia Books about books boxing Boy Scouts Brazil Bridgebuilding British Columbia British Israelism Brooms (mfg., etc) Building Trades Bulgaria Bullfighting Burma Business Business history, theory Buttons California California - Southern Calligraphy Canada Cannibalism (imputed) Caribbean Cartography Celebrities Censored material Ceylon Charles Kerr Publishing Company Chemical and biological warfare Childbearing Chile China Chinese American Christian Identity Movement CIA Cinema Circumcision Circumcision / infibulation Circus Civil Rights Civil War Classics Clowns Co-Operative Commonwealth Federation Co-operatives Coal mining Codes Coffee, tea, caffeine

    69. Palgrave Macmillan: Catalogue: Leadership And Social Movements
    Leadership and social movements Colin Barker, Alan Johnson, Michael Lavalette,Hardback December 2001 272 Pages, ISBN 07190-5901-1 List Price $74.95.
    http://www.palgrave-usa.com/catalogue/index.asp?isbn=0719059011

    70. Memo No. 26 PONARS, 1998
    Series Memo No. 26. PONARS, 1998. Foreign Funding of social movementsin Russia. Valerie Sperling. Harvard University, January 1998. Over
    http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~ponars/POLICY MEMOS/Sperlingmemo.html
    Program on New Approaches
    to Russian Security
    Policy Memo Series
    Memo No. 26 PONARS, 1998 Foreign Funding of Social Movements in Russia
    Valerie Sperling
    Harvard University, January 1998
    Over the course of the last several years, the United States government and private US foundations have allocated funding to support the development of a women's movement in Russia. These funds are intended to foster the development of a civil society and a market economy. Although the funding brings important benefits to the emergent women's movement, it also creates unexpected side effects. This paper analyzes the impact of foreign funding on the internal dynamics of the Russian women's movement. The analysis suggests that Russia's current economic infrastructure makes social movements receptive to foreign funding, and that foreign funds provide essential support for the Russian women's movement. However, without certain safeguards, the foreign funding itself may undermine the goals that motivate its provision in the first place.
    International influences, including funding, affect a social movement's incentive structure. They affect the movement's relationship to the state and the population, sometimes legitimizing movement demands in the eyes of officials, while alienating the movement from the population at the same time. Foreign funding is particularly important, in that it affects inter-group relationships, and helps explain why women's groups in Moscow do not collaborate more with each other, even when they have similar goals and strategies. It also helps to explain why groups do not engage in membership-building as a priority.

    71. Social Movements In World History
    social movements in the Context of World History (A WebQuest) World History Mr. Neumann Westlake High School Charles County, Maryland
    http://www.ccboe.com/westlake/academics/neumann/Mvmt1.htm
    Social Movements in the Context of World History
    (A WebQuest)
    World History Mr. Neumann Westlake High School Charles County, Maryland Introduction Task Resources Process ... Conclusion
    Introduction
    Pretend that you are a sociologist working for the U.S. State Department. Because of lobbying by special interest groups in the United States, the President and his administration are now interested in expanding the government's understanding of the influence of social movements in different areas of the world. You have been given the task of analyzing, and documenting, how one social movement has influenced social, political, and/or economic change in a particular area of the world. The information that you gather is important; it will be used by the President to guide U.S. domestic and foreign policy.
    The Task
    To successfully complete your area study for the President you will need to make sure that you do the following:
    • Read through this entire instruction sheet. Be able to define, and explain, the components which make up the life cycle of a social movement. Analyze and explain your assigned movement using the life cycle of a social movement model from sociology. You will accomplish this by completing the assignment worksheets.

    72. Society -> Social Movements & Organizations
    Social Organizations. Movement Azat Founded in 1990. In October 1992 three nationaldemocraticorganizations were consolidated into a single party Azat .
    http://kazakhstan-gateway.kz/society/socialmovements.htm
    Home About Us What's New Site Map ... References Social Organizations Movement "Azat"
    Founded in 1990. In October 1992 three national-democratic organizations were consolidated into a single party "Azat". Chairman of the party - Kozha-Akhmet Khasen. `
    Tel: (3272) 21-12-68 The Liberal Movement of Kazakhstan
    Founded in April 1997. Supports progressive market reforms, development of entrepreneur activities, SMEs in Kazakhstan. Chairman - Bisenbayev Asylbek Knarovich.
    Tel: (3272) 61-74-33 The Slav Movement "Lad"
    Registered in May 1993. Its activities extend to all the regions of Kazakhstan. Leader - V. Mikhailov. They issue newspaper "Lad" ("Harmony").
    Tel: (3172) 32-70-96 The Council of Women of Kazakhstan
    Republican Council of Women was reorganized into the Council of Women of Kazakhstan in June 1995.
    Chairman - Nina Kayupova, Director of the Institute of Maternity and Children's Protection.
    Tel: (3272) 64-46-34 The Union of Business People and Manufacturers of Kazakhstan
    Tel: (3272) 62-97-98, 62-52-89 The Council of Veterans of Kazakhstan Chairman - Makhtay Ramazanovich Sagdiyev Tel: (3272) 61-84-94 Youth Movement "For the Future of Kazakhstan" Founded in 1998. Leader - Raganin Meiram.

    73. Narratives And Social Movements
    Narratives and social movements. This is the home page for the informalworking group on narratives and social movements. From here
    http://www.unc.edu/~aperrin/narratives/
    Narratives and Social Movements
    This is the home page for the informal working group on narratives and social movements. From here you can link to three sub-areas:
  • Brief statements from working-group members on relevant topics Papers and other documents on relevant topics Information from the March 9-10 meeting in Cambridge Citations and links recommended for further reading ... Suggested reading/bibliography (maintained by Michael McQuarrie)
  • Four Questions
    These questions were proposed by Francesca Polletta and Marshall Ganz as part of the workshop:
  • How do stories work? When do we turn to story? If we think of storytelling as a performance rather than a text, then what makes for "bad" and "good" performances? What can you do with stories that you cannot do with other discursive forms? And what can you not do with stories? How and when do stories constrain? And how and when do they enable? Do narrative plots inevitably reproduce the status quo? Under what conditions do the stories people tell in their everyday lives warrant neither accommodation nor individualized resistance but overt and collective opposition? How do the institutional contexts within which storytelling takes place shape what one can and cannot do with stories? How do institutional conventions influence what kinds of stories and storytellers are seen as credible, appropriate, and authoritative? How does the cultural status of story shape what activists can do with stories?
  • 74. Stories Of Change Narrative & Social Movements
    Stories of Change Narrative and social movements. edited by JosephE. Davis. Despite the amount of storytellin in social movements
    http://www.virginia.edu/sociology/publications/joedavis1.htm
    Back to publications
    Back to CV
    Stories of Change
    Narrative and Social Movements
    edited by Joseph E. Davis Despite the amount of storytellin in social movements, little attention has been paid to narrative as a form of movement discourse or as a mode of social interaction. Stories of Change is a systrmatic study of narrative as well as a demonstration of the power of narrative analysis to illuminate many features of contemporary social movements. Davis includes a wide array of stories of change - stories of having been harmed or wronged, stories of conflict with unjust authorities, stories of liberation and empowerment, and storied of strategic success and failure. By showing how these stories are a powerful vehicle for producing, regulating, and diffusing shared meaning, the contributors explore movement stories, their functions, and the conditions under which they are created and performed. They show how narrative study can illuminate social movement emergence, recruitment, internal dynamics, and identity building. "This book treats a topic that reflects issues that are currently on the cutting edge of the field of social movements and moves it forward. It is quite interesting to read, especially since some of the movements have not had much written about them and are generally less contentious than the movements that received center stage." William A. Gamson, author of

    75. Doing Democracy: The MAP Model For Organizing Social Movements
    The MAP Model for Organizing social movements by Bill Moyer with JoAnn McAllister,Mary Lou Finley and Steven Soifer contributions by Nancy Gregory and
    http://store.globalexchange.org/doing.html
    The MAP Model for Organizing Social Movements
    by Bill Moyer
    with JoAnn McAllister, Mary Lou Finley and Steven Soifer
    contributions by Nancy Gregory and Juliette Beck
    Citizen activism has achieved many positive results. But the road to success for social movements is often complex, usually lasting many years, with few guides for evaluating the precise stage of a movement's evolution to determine the best way forward. One week the news will be alive with stories of thousands of people in the streets; the next week, the thousands are gone. But has the movement withered and died – or has it just changed shape?
    Through understanding and analyzing social movements, Doing Democracy shows that the apparent ups and downs of a movement generally follow a pattern - which can be used to plan and carry out social action that is even more effective.
    Beginning with an overview of social movement theory and the MAP (Movement Action Plan) model, Doing Democracy outlines the eight typical stages of social movements, the four roles of activists, and case studies from the civil rights, anti-nuclear energy, Central America, gay/lesbian, women's health (breast cancer), and globalization movements.
    Doing Democracy will appeal to social movement activists and organizations working on all issues, as well as to academics in a variety of disciplines ranging from political science, sociology, and peace studies, through women studies and the various courses in social work schools. Accessibly written, it will also be of interest to all those interested in better understanding the social movements they hear about in the daily media. (227 pages, 2001)

    76. NCCS - Advocacy Bibliography: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
    Democracy and Civil Society Theory, Frameworks, Models, Data Rights, Law andRegulations social movements PoliticallyActive Nonprofit Organizations
    http://nccs.urban.org/adv-social.htm
    Advocacy Bibliography
    Democracy and Civil Society Theory, Frameworks, Models, Data Rights, Law and Regulations Politically-Active Nonprofit Organizations ... Alphabetical Listing by Author ADV: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
  • McAdam, Doug, John D. McCarthy, and Mayer N. Zald. Comparative Perspectives on Social Movements: Political Opportunities, Mobilizing Structures and Cultural Framings. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
  • Meyer, David S., and Sydney Tarrow. The Social Movement Society: Contentious Politics for a New Century. Lanham, MD: Rowman Little Field, 1998.
  • Tarrow, Sidney. Power in Movement: Social Movements, Collective Action and Politics. Cambridge, England: Cambridge Uinversity Press, 1994.
  • Zald, Mayer and John Mc.Carthy. Social Movements in an Organizational Society : Collected Essays. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1990. Comments and questions may be
    sent via email to NCCS@ui.urban.org
  • 77. Democracy & Social Movements(demos)
    Democracy social movements(demos) was constructed in 2001 to introduce KoreanNGOs and their activities to outer world by Sungkonghoe University in Seoul
    http://www.demos.or.kr/eng/index_eng.html
    Korean NGOs Archives Demos in korean Introduction The University renowned for its open attitude, i.e. emphsis on humanity, democracy and social values. Based on these principles it has been a pioneer in the teaching of human rights, peace, environment and feminism. It is particularly well placed to provide NGO programmes, since many teaching staff are not only specialists in their field, but also active practitioners in the third sector. The Education Ministry of Korea designated the university as the top educational institution specializing in NGO studies in 2000. With the specialty of the university, this demos was designed as a library to provide activists, academia, and the public with information on Korean civil society focuing on civil and social movements for democracy, human rights, peace, etc. Korean NGOs Labour Campaign Consumer Protection Education ... Youth

    78. LAB : Themes In-Depth : Social Movements
    social movements. What are they? There are social movements involved in allareas of development, and they are highlighted in the relevant themes.
    http://www.latinamericabureau.org/?lid=356

    79. Rubriek: 71.38 Sociology: Social Movements
    DutchESS, Dutch Electronic Subject Service, Rubriek 71.38 sociologysocial movements. Link , Documents from the women's liberation
    http://www.kb.nl/dutchess/71/38/
    Rubriek: 71.38 sociology: social movements
    Documents from the women's liberation movement : an on-line archival collection / Anne Valk, Linda Gordon, Rosalyn Baxandall Emancipatie en duurzame ontwikkeling, een probleemverkenning / Maureen E. Butter The Emma Goldman papers The Feminist Chronicles 1953-1993 ... The Suffragists Oral History Project

    80. Social Movement Course Page
    CMST224RHETORIC OF social movements John M. Sloop; Office 213 CalhounHall; Classroom 109 Calhoun Hall; Sep 01 social movements Defined.
    http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/Comm/Courses/social.htm
    CMST224RHETORIC OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Short Cuts to: OBJECTIVES Our class discussions will utilize rhetorical documents from the 1960s in order to provide an understanding of how social movements have function historically. However, I will ask you to work through documents of contemporary social movements (ones that you feel an interest or connection to) in some class discussions and in your essays. The idea is that by focusing on the 1960s, (1) we are able to look at a period with a great deal of social movement discourse to work with; (2) the discourse will be "alien" enough from us that we will be able to look at it with some degree of distance; (3) to the degree that present discourses are an effect of their historical usage, it will provide you with a better sense of how "we" became what we are now and how powerful discourse is. The class is structured into three segments: (1) during the first several weeks of the semester, we will discuss theories of social movements and ways of thinking about their influence and the powerful of social institutions to control them; (2) we will spend the bulk of the semester on social movements discourse from the 1960s and tie those to the present; (3) finally, each of you (in pairs or alone) will present an analysis of a contemporary social movements.

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