Social
movements differ by their audience, issues
they promote and the way this is performed. A particularly important
distinguishment is the one between the so called old social movements and the
new social movements. Firstly, audience difference should be considered. The
old social movements are advocacy networks and civic mobilization structures
that focus on protecting and advancing wellfare for the definite social groups
- the working class, peasants, ethnic or religious communities. The new social
movements are more issue-centered, rather than audience-centered. They promote
ideas and policy orientations that go beyond, but are not separate from
stratifications of class or ethnicity. Secondly, the distinction between the
old and the new social movements becomes evidently sharp when the issue framing
is considered. Issues of the old social movements are labor rights, protection
from layoffs, issues of land and capital control, nationalism, religious rights.
New social movements promote and mobilize around such issues as environment,
feminism, civil rights, freedom of speech, free software and creative commons
information, anti-war and global justice, LGBT rights and more. The first set
of issues in terms of framing is more often related to the demands of
redistribution. Conversely, the second set of issues is more often framed with
recognition as major demand. Thirdly, there is the difference in repertoire of
social movement tactics. Old social movements usually have more possibilities
to initiate a strike or national campaign, whereas the new social movements
have to be more creative, therefore they
often invent new methods of action involving indirect sabotage or symbolic
action for the promotion of their issue.
Donatella
Della Porta, Mario Diani. 2006. Social Movements: an Introduction
1 comment:
The diagram is missing.
Post a Comment