Collective Behavior and Social Movements Part II

Similar documents
Voting and Elections

The Dilemmas of Dissent and Political Response

Preventing Violent Extremism A Strategy for Delivery

FINAL RESULTS: National Voter Survey Total Sample Size: 2428, Margin of Error: ±2.0% Interview Dates: November 1-4, 2018

Role of Political and Legal Systems. Unit 5

Public Schools and Sexual Orientation

Democratization Social mobilisation and. revolution

Unit 5, Activity 1, Rights of Citizens

Interest Groups Private organization that seek to influence public policy Characteristics: Organized structure Shared beliefs/goals 1 st Amendment pro

Political Consumerism

Quarter 2 CIVICS: What You Will Need to Know!

High School. Prentice Hall. Sociology, 12th Edition (Macionis) Indiana Academic Standards - Social Studies Sociology.

Social Movements: A Means of Classifying Types of Social Movements in Terms of Organization

Chapter 10: An Organizational Model for Pro-Family Activism

Introduction to Sociology: Concepts, Theories and Models

OUTCOME C: POLITICAL IDEOLOGY + ELECTIONS

Prentice Hall. Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach, 9th Edition (Henslin) High School. Indiana Academic Standards - Social Studies Sociology

Western Europe: New Unity. After the end of World War II, most of Western Europe recovered economically and the region became more unified.

Emphasis on Suburban soccer Pro- gun control L Anti- gay marriage C

Introduction: conceptualizing social movements

Key Concepts Chart (A Time of Upheaval)

Chapter Four. Interest Articulation

Pathways to Islamist Radicalisation

-What are the five basic freedoms that are listed in the 1st Amendment?

Action Theory. Collective Conscience. Critical Theory. Determinism. Description

The Campaign: Issues and Strategies

WHAT IS COINTELPRO? Curricular Directions for COINTELPRO 101 a film by The Freedom Archives

Introduction to Public Policy Analysis. What is Public Policy?

If A Tree Falls Discussion Guide

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE POLITICAL BELIEFS AND BEHAVIORS PUBLIC OPINION PUBLIC OPINION, THE SPECTRUM, & ISSUE TYPES DESCRIPTION

A continuum of tactics. Tactics, Strategy and the Interactions Between Movements and their Targets & Opponents. Interactions

Obligations (something you HAVE to do or you can be penalized or punished in some way) 1. (Example: voting) 2. Selective Service: (Define it below)

Assignment #3220 Social Studies 30 Issue 4 Quiz A. Name: Date:

Chapter 22 Social Change in the Global Community. Introduction to Sociology Spring 2010

Political Culture in America

Living in our Globalized World: Notes 18 Antisystemic protest Copyright Bruce Owen 2009 Robbins: most protest is ultimately against the capitalist

UNIT 2. Industrialization, Immigration, and the Gilded Age

Democracy and American Politics. The best argument against democracy is a fiveminute conversation with the average voter.

INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL SCIENCE [ITP521S]

Module 6 Social Protests and Social Movements

I Can Statements. Chapter 19: World War II Begins. Chapter 20: America and World War II. American History Part B. America and the World

Theories of Collective Behaviour. From CB to SM

Magruder s American Government

Northampton Primary Academy Trust

UNDER THE SOCIAL SCIENTIST'S EYE 519

Collective Action, Interest Groups and Social Movements. Nov. 24

Obligations (something you HAVE to do or you can be penalized or punished in some way)

Current Pennsylvania Polling

Tactics: Building and winning campaigns. Feb Johannesburg, South Africa

University of North Dakota. American Government I

Open the following documents from my website. Chinese Nationalism Notes

A Kit for Community Groups to Demystify Voting

Police and the Community

COMMON QUESTIONS ON BEING ARRESTED IN PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATIONS, WHILE LEAFLETING, AND/OR FROM DOING CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE INTRODUCTION

Government chapter 11 study guide

Government Research Priorities for TSAS

Propaganda during World War II

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AND PROPAGANDA WAR: SOME METHODS AND FORMS TO COUNTERACT AUTHOR: DR.VOLODYMYR OGRYSKO

A Critique on Schumpeter s Competitive Elitism: By Examining the Case of Chinese Politics

enforce people s contribution to the general good, as everyone naturally wants to do productive work, if they can find something they enjoy.

KING JAMES I ACADEMY. Prevent Policy. Date Adopted by Governors: November 2018

We the People Unit 5: Lesson 23. How does the Constitution protect freedom of expression?

Video Notes Unit 2 Political Beliefs & Behaviors

Steps to consider. 3/17/2011 Hastings: Image management in nonviolent civil society struggle 2

Report on community resilience to radicalisation and violent extremism

DRAFT. 24B What are the freedoms and responsibilities of citizens in Australia s democracy?

CURRICULUM GUIDE for Sherman s The West in the World

Mr. Bayard Rustin: Let My Work Speak For Me! African-American Leader Article

Countering Violent Extremism. Mohamed A.Younes Future For Advanced Research and Studies

VOTER ID 101. The Right to Vote Shouldn t Come With Barriers. indivisible435.org

Change versus more of the same: On-going panel of target voting groups provides path for Democrats in 2018

Old to New Social Movements: Capitalism, Culture and the Reinvention of Everyday Life. In this lecture. Marxism and the Labour Movement

US History and Geography 2015 Houston High School Interactive Curriculum Framework

SOCIO-EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG JOB EMIGRANTS IN THE CONTEXT OF ANOTHER CULTURAL ENVIRONMENT

PERIOD 8: Teachers have flexibility to use examples such as the following: development of hydrogen bomb, massive retaliation, space race

Repertoires and Violence in Contentious Politics. Spath 385 Arab Politics & Society Spring 2010

Teacher Guide: rights

Determine 2-3 ideal dates for the meeting

And so at its origins, the Progressive movement was a

School Prevent Policy Protecting Children from Extremism and Radicalisation

Political History of the United States

Marching for Equal Rights: Evaluating the Success of the 1963 March on Washington. Subject Area: US History after World War II History and Government

This fear of approaching social turmoil or even revolution leads the middle class Progressive reformers to a

Framing the movie: We hear it, we see it, we act

1 Chapter 33 Answers. 3a. No. The right to vote was extended to eighteen-year-olds by the Twenty-Sixth Amendment, ratified in See page 535.

Unit 4 Active Citizenship

Congressional Investigations:

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 By Jessica McBirney 2016

Written Testimony. Submitted to the British Council All Party Parliamentary Group on Building Resilience to Radicalism in MENA November 2016

THE DURBAN STRIKES 1973 (Institute For Industrial Education / Ravan Press 1974)

John Paul Tabakian, Ed.D. Political Science 5 Western Political Thought. Spring 2018 / Fall 2018 Power Point 6

National Issues Poll 8/18/2017. Bold Media served as the sponsoring organization; Opinion Savvy LLC conducted the survey on behalf of the sponsor.

Cato Institute Policing in America Survey

Unit 5: Political Parties

TRIMLEY ST. MARTIN. PREVENT Policy. On-Line Safety. Child Protection & Safeguarding

AP U.S. History Essay Questions, 1994-present. Document-Based Questions

Jeroen Warner. Wageningen UR

Assignment #3220 Social Studies 30 Issue 4 Quiz B. Name: Date:

Party Ideology and Policies

Rejection of liberalism. The justification for dictatorships

Transcription:

Collective Behavior and Social Movements Part II A social movement that only moves people is merely a revolt. A movement that changes both people and institutions is a revolution. Martin Luther King Jr

Social Movement...an organized group that acts consciously to promote or resist change through collective action using at least some unconventional or uninstitutionalized methods proactive social movements: initial social movements that are created in order to change society reactive social movements: the resistance to the proactive social movements institutionalized social movement: accepted by authorities... violence not directed against authorities but does not rule out violence directed against the opposition

Social Movement Types of Actions 1. conforming 2. deviant 3. collective Behaviors 1. social movements 2. crowds 3. riots 4. rumors and gossip 5. mass hysteria 6. fads and fashion Social Movements (5:48) Social movements are a type of collective behavior. Behavior is a type of action. Examples of Social Movements 1. labor movement 2. women s movement 3. populist movement 4. civil rights movement 5. anti-war movement 6. welfare rights movement 7. gay rights movement

Social Movement Development People engage in social movements either to bring about change or to resist change... civil rights march vs. protesting a nuclear plant in your town. For a movement to appear, people must perceive their discontent as the result of controllable forces external to themselves. preconditions experience strain or deprivation believe in the right to satisfy unmet needs believe that satisfaction cannot be achieved through established channels

Social Movement Ideology and Framing As individuals interact, an ideology must emerge that justifies collective activity. Ideologies are often developed by movement participants as the movement grows. Once social movement groups have identified and committed to ideological positions, they must articulate and present their ideas to others in order to win support, gain members and gather resources.

Social Movement Recruitment Development and continuing existence depends on the process of attracting supporters. Recruitment depends on three catalysts: ideology, identity and existing social networks. Sometimes entire categories of people are recruited all at once (members of minority group, religious order, work or professional group). The people who are more susceptible to social movements are those who are: mobile with little chance to become integrated into community, not fully accepted/integrated into group, marginal, isolated from community, threatened by economic insecurity and loss of social status, free from family responsibilities or estranged from family, maladjusted.

Social Movement Organization...organized component of a social movement that carries out the tasks that are necessary for any social movement to survive and to be successful only one part of a particular social movement which is composed of many social movement organizations that have coordinating roles in social movements but do not actually employ or direct most of the participants, who are part of a wider social movement community example: civil rights movement was a social movement composed of specific social movement organizations such as SNCC and CORE

Types of Social Movements alternative: do-it-yourself efforts that seek to change some aspects of individuals behavior... don t text and drive campaign redemptive: seeks total personal transformation and is typically religious in nature... spread of Christianity reformative: seeks an immense change in a certain aspect of society... pro-life or pro-choice, gay rights, civil rights transformative: work for total or complete structural change... radical political groups communist revolution

Types of Social Movements transnational: collectivity of groups with adherents in more than one country that is committed to sustained contentious action for a common cause... animal rights metaformative: goal is to change the social order not just of a specific country but of an entire civilization or the world... al Qaeda millenarian: weakening or disruption of old social order, social unrest and loss of power resulting in religious movement that believes in the coming of new world in part through supernatural action... included here because the type is unique and not always included in standard typologies

Types of Social Movements

Social Movement Membership inner core: most committed to the movement... sets the groups goals, time tables, strategies... predispositions of inner core crucial in choosing tactics committed: less committed than the inner core... can be counted on to show up for demonstrations, grunt work less committed: less dependable... participation depends on convenience

What Types of People Join Social Movements? individuals that are deeply committed to a set of goals those that support the goals of the movement those who enjoy being a part of the social movement (insecure) those that are curious about social movement activities those that use the social movement s activities for their own personal interests

How are age and education related to support for social movement activity?

Social Movement Theories new social movement Focus is on sources of social movements, including politics, ideology and culture. resource mobilization relative deprivation social construction theory: frame analysis People participate in social movements when the movement has access to key resources. People compare achievements, become discontent and join social movements to get their fair share. Used to determine how people assign meaning to activities and processes in social movements.

Why People Join Social Movements moral issues and ideological commitment mass society theory: assumption that the movement offers them a sense of belonging... many people feel isolated in a mass society and social movements fill this void... offer a sense of belonging... find more social movements where ties are stronger, midwest and south deprivation theory: people who feel deprived (of means, justice, status, privilege) join social movements in hope of redressing their grievances... example: African Americans in civil rights movement

Why People Join Social Movements relative deprivation theory: belief that people join social movements based on their evaluations of what they think they should have compared with what others have... improving conditions can spark revolutions... occurs when people's expectations outstrip the actual change they experience... example: In civil rights movement black demonstrators compared themselves with whites with equal status. What is the significance of whom we choose for comparison?

Relative Deprivation & Revolution time 1 time 2

Social Movement Publics public: a dispersed group of people relevant to a social movement sympathetic public: sympathetic to movement but have no commitment... fertile ground for recruitment and support at the ballot box hostile public: movement's values go against their own... want to stop the movement disinterested public: unaware or indifferent to the social movement although some precipitating event could cause them to move to the sympathetic or hostile public

The Membership and Publics of Social Movements

Social Movements and the Government Radical social change in social movements poses a threat to elite power. agent provocateur: someone who joins a group in order to spy and sabotage by provoking its members to commit extreme acts Agents must share at least some of the class, age, gender, racial/ethnic or religious characteristics of the group and work their way into the center of the group. Agents often come from their own group... example: FBI recruited agents to sabotage groups and provoke illegal activities that otherwise would not have occurred.

Social Group Tactics: Propaganda...information provided by individuals or groups that have a vested interest in furthering their own cause or damaging an opposing one

Social Group Tactics: Propaganda

Social Group Tactics: Propaganda name-calling: arouse opposition to competing product, candidate, policy by associating it with a negative image... makes one's own product, candidate, policy attractive by contrast glittering generality: surrounds product, candidate, policy with images that arouse positive feelings such as new, fresh, pure transfer: in positive form associate product, candidate, policy with something public respects or approves such as surrounding product with American flags... in negative form associate product, candidate, policy with something of which public disapproves

Social Group Tactics: Propaganda testimonials: famous figures endorse product, candidate, policy... negative form: competing product, candidate, policy is associated with someone people despise plain folks: associate product, candidate, policy with "just plain folks... "I'm just a regular person like you. bandwagon: "Everyone is doing it... emphasize how many others buy product or support candidate or policy to convey message that anyone who doesn't join in is on wrong track

Social Group Tactics: Propaganda card stacking: present only positive information about what you support and only negative information about what you oppose... intent is to make it sound as though there is only one conclusion a rational person can draw... falsehoods, distortions, illogical statements used

What type of social movement activities would you support?

Stages of Social Movement Development emergence initial unrest and agitation... People begin to become aware of a threatening problem. coalescence resource mobilization... People begin to organize and start making the threat known to the public. bureaucratization institutionalization decline organizational decline and possible resurgence

Stages of Social Movement Development

Success and Failure of Social Movements Social movements rarely solve social problems but many social movements affect society. decline

The End