Friday, May 30, 2014

syllabus





Course Information
Instructor: Dr. Timothy Kubal
units : 3
Office Number: SS 224
Time:   330-445
Location:  SS203
Telephone: 278-5145
Website: Blackboard
Office Hours: MW 445-645, via email, and by appointment


Course Description
Theory of nonviolent direct action in the pursuit of social justice and social change. Discussion of goals, ideology, norms, organizational structure, leadership, strategy, tactics, and social roots of social movements.
Learning Outcomes
Students will display understanding of movement literature by finding and reading articles before class, and participating in class discussion about these articles.  Students will display their understanding of the literature through midterm and final exams.  Students will practice working with others by joining a group in class and participating in group meetings and tactics to draw attention to their cause.  Students will practice organizing through at least 5 papers that summarize five different campaigns undertaken by their group.  Students will develop the habit of learning about social movements through the news program Democracy Now! by submitting weekly papers summarizing at least two stories.
Assignments
The course will help develop understanding and skills in organizing social movements.  Students will practice different types of movement activism and write about their experience.  The class needs to break into groups of three to five people. The group will be charged with drawing attention to their cause on campus this semester.   The success of this will be demonstrated through documenting the tactics, and through a pre and post survey. 
 Beginning of the semester: Conduct a survey.  I will help you do this.
Throughout the semester:  In order to draw attention to your cause, you will need to devise a group name, a collective action frame, an organizational chart, blogpage, and an assessment of your resources, goals, opportunities, and constraints.  The group also needs to devise creative ways to impart your collective action frame, such as through an icon, mascot or logo.  The group will be responsible for working together to communicate with the public: organize, publicize, and conduct 5 events from the following tactic types:
1.     Movie/discussion -- Movie for all students with discussion afterwards (1 movie event required) 
2.     Listening table/writing wall campaign in free speech area (several days minimum)
3.     Street theater campaign in free speech area (two 10 minute events on two different days, minimum)
4.     Public event on campus (e.g., concert, comedy)
5.     Fund-raising event (e.g., fundraising walk or bowlathon)
6.     Informational picket on campus – hand flyers to students in front of entry ways to classrooms.  Several days minimum.
7.     Social media – must setup and maintain over one month at least
8.     Newspaper campaign (e.g., letter to editor – each person must write one, on different dates or different places)
9.     Direct action / occupation (must be formally approved in writing from the instructor and department chair)
10.  Protest march (group has budget for signs)
11.  Boycott
12.  Speaker/panel/debate on campus (there is be grant money to bring in a public speaker, if you know of someone good, we can ask for up to $1000 for a speaker honorarium)
13.  Push polling / online survey (required)
14.  Petition signing campaign (online/in person – done over at least 1 month period)
15.  Breach campaign (break norms; must be done several times; must be approved)
16.  Flyers/chalking/signs (posted around campus –must be done several times over at least 1 month period)
17.  face to face interviewing/Knocking on doors (must be done over several days)
18.  Volunteer 2+ hours per person for a local movement group that addresses your cause
You ought to spend at least 2 hours completing each of these, and ideally most of them should be done more than once on different days.  Most importantly, you must not break any campus rules.  Notice civil disobedience is not listed here.  It is not acceptable to do civil disobedience for this class.  Occupations and direct actions might be approved; if interested, the instructor can facilitate the approval process with a request sent via email.  These are all legal, serious tools of social change.  The ability to organize is cited as one of the reasons we go to war, and one of the reasons for our freedom – we have the right to organize.  This course is established to help your practice organizing.  Each of the above requires at least one week of planning, including professor approval of the general tactic planned.  I will provide more guidance about each of these, and I encourage you to ask as many questions as possible while planning.  We will have time in class for group planning meetings.  The movie series and push polling are required. I can work with you individually if you can’t do the movie due to scheduling.  I will show you how to do push polling in class.   Also, some of these are easier than others, and thus you cannot submit more than one of them for credit.  For example, you may only submit one of the following for credit: flyers, petition, informational picket.

You are encouraged to become your own student group, which will make you eligible for your own $1000 per semester allocation for campus events.  If you don’t become your own organization, we can put forward your grant applications through the sociology club.  Going through the club means it has to be approved by the club, using our $1000 budget. This is fine for a few things that have common interest, but isn’t feasible for everyone.  Create your own student organization if you want to organize larger events that cost money.  
Each group will be given a spending allowance of $100 for your events.  To access these funds, you will need to submit an itemized receipt after your event.   It is acceptable if you want to spend your own money.  I have a free survey program we will use at the beginning and end of the semester, and I have a free telephone interviewing program that you will use for push polling. 
  You will be graded on the best five papers you submit that document each of your events.  Document your event with pictures, written summary of at least 300 words, and perhaps video or other ways to document your event.  Each person needs to provide their own documentation and summary of your event.   In your summary, make sure to summarize what you did to publicize/setup the event, how it went down, and how you would improve if you did the same thing again in the future.  Make sure to clearly discuss the extent of your involvement in the actual event.  Also, make sure to document how well you think the event did to alter opinion about your issue. 
Send completed papers to:
 tkubal2.2009.protest@blogger.com
Make sure your name is on your paper.  Paste the paper into the email (do not attach) before sending.
Conduct/analyze a survey at the end of the semester.  I will help you do this.
Alternative to one or two of five required group papers -- Get involved – For each of the 5 events you are not able to participate in (up to two), you may substitute 5 hours of volunteering for a local movement group.  Find a local group, get the group approved by the instructor as a legitimate local movement group, and introduce yourself to at least one of their leaders.  Find out about how you can get involved and volunteer.  Volunteer 5 hours of time for each of the campus events you miss, and summarize the experience in the paper.
Discussion – weekly 300 word summary of at least two stories from Democracy Now! (or other news outlets) from the previous week on social movements.  Include links to stories.    Include your name in the body of the email message. Send to tkubal2.2009.protest@blogger.com
Literature – midterm and final  -- Unique 5 page synthesis of 5 unique articles from class reading list.
Class participation – complete assigned reading before class and participate in teaching and learning about the assigned readings.  

Grading
Papers summarizing movement tactic 100 pts x 5 = 500
Weekly Discussion 10pts x 10 = 100
Midterm = 50 points
Final = 50 points
Class participation and attendance throughout semester = 100

800 – 720 A
719 – 640 B
639 – 560 C
559 – 480 D
479 - 0  F

University Policies

The syllabus must note the university Policy on Students with Disabilities, the University Honor Code, the Policy on Cheating and Plagiarism, a statement on copyright, and the university computer requirement University policies can be included in the syllabus by reference to statements in the University Catalog and Class Schedule. For example, one might state: "For information on the University's policy regarding cheating and plagiarism, refer to the Class Schedule (Legal Notices on Cheating and Plagiarism) or the University Catalog (Policies and Regulations)." These may also be incorporated by directing students to the online required syllabus policy statement page (http://www.csufresno.edu/academics/documents/RequiredSyllabusPolicyStatements_001.doc) 
Below are some sample statements that provide more than just the reference. In all instances, it is recommended that specific examples of what you consider to be cheating and plagiarism be included. See also those listed in the University Policy.

Students with Disabilities:

Upon identifying themselves to the instructor and the university, students with disabilities will receive reasonable accommodation for learning and evaluation. For more information, contact Services to Students with Disabilities in the Henry Madden Library, Room 1202 (278-2811).

Honor Code:

“Members of the CSU Fresno academic community adhere to principles of academic integrity and mutual respect while engaged in university work and related activities.”  You should:
a)      understand or seek clarification about expectations for academic integrity in this course (including no cheating, plagiarism and inappropriate collaboration)
b)      neither give nor receive unauthorized aid on examinations or other course work that is used by the instructor as the basis of grading.
c)       take responsibility to monitor academic dishonesty in any form and to report it to the instructor or other appropriate official for action.
Instructors may require students to sign a statement at the end of all exams and assignments that “I have done my own work and have neither given nor received unauthorized assistance on this work.” If you are going to use this statement, include it here.

Cheating and Plagiarism:

"Cheating is the actual or attempted practice of fraudulent or deceptive acts for the purpose of improving one's grade or obtaining course credit; such acts also include assisting another student to do so. Typically, such acts occur in relation to examinations. However, it is the intent of this definition that the term 'cheating' not be limited to examination situations only, but that it include any and all actions by a student that are intended to gain an unearned academic advantage by fraudulent or deceptive means. Plagiarism is a specific form of cheating which consists of the misuse of the published and/or unpublished works of others by misrepresenting the material (i.e., their intellectual property) so used as one's own work." Penalties for cheating and plagiarism range from a 0 or F on a particular assignment, through an F for the course, to expulsion from the university. For more information on the University's policy regarding cheating and plagiarism, refer to the Class Schedule (Legal Notices on Cheating and Plagiarism) or the University Catalog (Policies and Regulations).

Computers:

"At California State University, Fresno, computers and communications links to remote resources are recognized as being integral to the education and research experience. Every student is required to have his/her own computer or have other personal access to a workstation (including a modem and a printer) with all the recommended software. The minimum and recommended standards for the workstations and software, which may vary by academic major, are updated periodically and are available from Information Technology Services or the University Bookstore (http://www.kennelbookstore.com). In the curriculum and class assignments, students are presumed to have 24-hour access to a computer workstation and the necessary communication links to the University's information resources."

Disruptive Classroom Behavior:

"The classroom is a special environment in which students and faculty come together to promote learning and growth. It is essential to this learning environment that respect for the rights of others seeking to learn, respect for the professionalism of the instructor, and the general goals of academic freedom are maintained. ... Differences of viewpoint or concerns should be expressed in terms which are supportive of the learning process, creating an environment in which students and faculty may learn to reason with clarity and compassion, to share of themselves without losing their identities, and to develop and understanding of the community in which they live . . . Student conduct which disrupts the learning process shall not be tolerated and may lead to disciplinary action and/or removal from class."

Copyright Policy:

Copyright laws and fair use policies protect the rights of those who have produced the material. The copy in this course has been provided for private study, scholarship, or research.  Other uses may require permission from the copyright holder.  The user of this work is responsible for adhering to copyright law of the U.S. (Title 17, U.S. Code).  To help you familiarize yourself with copyright and fair use policies, the University encourages you to visit its Copyright Web Page (http://libguides.csufresno.edu/copyright).
Technology Innovations for Learning & Teaching (TILT) course web sites contain material protected by copyrights held by the instructor, other individuals or institutions. Such material is used for educational purposes in accord with copyright law and/or with permission given by the owners of the original material.  You may download one copy of the materials on any single computer for non-commercial, personal, or educational purposes only, provided that you (1) do not modify it, (2) use it only for the duration of this course, and (3) include both this notice and any copyright notice originally included with the material.   Beyond this use, no material from the course web site may be copied, reproduced, re-published, uploaded, posted, transmitted, or distributed in any way without the permission of the original copyright holder.  The instructor assumes no responsibility for individuals who improperly use copyrighted material placed on the web site.



Date
Topic
Reading Assignment
Wed., Jan 29
Introduction to sociology
Online chapter
Wed., Feb 5
Intro to sociological method
Online chapters
Wed., Feb 12
Intro to Movements
Online chapter

Wed., Feb 19
Media and movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Feb 26
 Movements and memory
Online chapter -- excerpt from Kubal’s Cultural Movements and Collective Memory
Wed., Mar 5
Movements and memory
Online article – forthcoming article from Kubal and Becerra and any one article from list
Wed., Mar 12
Movement processes
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Mar 19
Animal rights movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Mar 26
Education movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Apr 2
Environmental movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Apr 9
Labor / Sweatshop
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Apr 16
Food / Hunger Movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Apr 23
Criminal Justice Movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., Apr 30
Peace Movements
Any 2 articles from list
Wed., May 7
Movement Theory
Any 2 articles from list


Final Exam Preparation & Faculty Consultation Days:
Thursday and Friday
May 8-9
Final Semester Examinations
Monday-Thursday
May 12-15
Final Exam DUE in this course
STEP 5 PAPER DUE
 MAY 15, 10PM



reading list

Social Movements (Soc 122)
Reading List Spring 2014
This is the master reading list.  Each week in the semester, we will cover the topic in bold below.  You should choose any two articles under that topic as your reading for that week. 
Most of these articles are available via sociological abstracts.  If not available there, please check google scholar, jstor, and academic-ebsco.

Media and Movements
 Personalization of Politics: Political Identity, Social Media, and Changing Patterns of Participation

Reference 3 - 0.24% Coverage

Multi-Issue, Internet-Mediated Interest Organizations and their Implications for US Politics: A Case of
MoveOn.org


Reference 5 - 0.20% Coverage

Reporting Conventions: Journalists, Activists, and the Thorny Struggle for Political Visibility

Reference 6 - 0.42% Coverage

Thigo, P. (2013). People, technology and spaces: Towards a new generation of social movements. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 31(2), 255-264. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2013.783755


Reference 8 - 0.35% Coverage

Making the News: Movement Organizations, Media Attention, and the Public Agenda
Andrews, Kenneth T; Caren, Neal. American Sociological Review75.6 (Dec 2010): 841-866.

Reference 9 - 0.53% Coverage

All the Movements Fit to Print: Who, What, When, Where, and Why SMO Families Appeared in the New York Times in the Twentieth Century
Amenta, Edwin; Caren, Neal; Olasky, Sheera Joy; Stobaugh, James E. American Sociological Review74.4 (Aug 2009): 636-656.

Reference 10 - 0.35% Coverage

THE USE OF NEWSPAPER DATA IN THE STUDY OF COLLECTIVE ACTION
Earl, Jennifer; Martin, Andrew; McCarthy, John D; Soule, Sarah A. Annual Review of Sociology30 (2004): 65-80.

Movements and Memory
Armstrong, Elizabeth A and Suzanna M Crage. 2006. "Movements and memory: the making of
the Stonewall myth." American Sociological Review 71,5: 724-751.
Benford, Robert D. 2002. “Controlling narratives and narratives as control within social
movements” Pp53-76 in Davis, Joseph. Stories of change: Narrative and social movements. Albany: SUNY Press.
Bromberg, Minna and Gary Alan Fine. 2002. "Resurrecting the Red: Pete Seeger and the
Purification of Difficult Reputations." Social Forces 80,4: 1135-1155.
Conway, Brian. 2003. "Active remembering, selective forgetting, and collective identity: The
case of Bloody Sunday." Identity: an international journal of theory and research 3:305-323.
Cunningham, David, Colleen Nugent, and Caitlin Slodden. 2010. "The durability of collective
memory: Reconciling the “Greensboro massacre”." Social Forces 88,4 :1517-1542.
Eyerman, Ron. 2004. "The Past in the Present Culture and the Transmission of Memory." Acta
Sociologica 47,2: 159-169.
Fine, Gary Alan. 1996. "Reputational entrepreneurs and the memory of incompetence: Melting
supporters, partisan warriors, and images of President Harding." American Journal of Sociology 101,5: 1159-1193.

Gill, Sandra. 2012. “Recalling a Difficult Past: Whites’ Memories of Birmingham.” Sociological

Inquiry 82, 1: 29–48. 


Gongaware, Timothy B. 2003. "Collective Memories and Collective Identities Maintaining Unity
in Native American Educational Social Movements." Journal of Contemporary
Ethnography 32,5: 483-520.
Gongaware, Timothy B. 2010. "Collective Memory Anchors: Collective Identity and Continuity
in Social Movements." Sociological Focus 43,3: 214-239.
Griffin, Larry J. 2004. "“Generations and Collective Memory” Revisited: Race, Region, and
Memory of Civil Rights." American Sociological Review 69,4 :544-557.
Griffin, Larry J and Kenneth A Bollen. 2009. "What do these memories do? Civil Rights
Rremembrance and Racial Attitudes." American Sociological Review 74,4: 594-614.

Isaac, Larry. 2008. "Movement of Movements: Culture Moves in the Long Civil Rights
Struggle." Social Forces 87,1: 33-63.
Jansen, Robert S. 2007. "Resurrection and Appropriation: Reputational Trajectories, Memory
Work, and the Political Use of Historical Figures." American Journal of Sociology
112,4 :953-1007.
Larson, Jeff A and Omar Lizardo. 2007. "Generations, Identities, and the Collective Memory of
Che Guevara." Sociological Forum 22,4: 425-451.
McElroy, Kathleen. 2013. “You Must Remember This: Obituaries and the Civil Rights
Movement.” Journal of Black Studies 44,4: 335-355. 
Meyer, David S and Deana A Rohlinger. 2012. “Big Books and Social Movements: A Myth of
Ideas and Social Change.”  Social Problems 59,1: 136—153.
Polletta, Francesca. 1998. "Legacies and liabilities of an insurgent past: Remembering Martin
Luther King, Jr., on the House and Senate floor." Social Science History 22,4:479-512.
Schuman, Howard and Amy D Corning. 2000. "Collective knowledge of public events: The
Soviet era from the great purge to glasnost." American Journal of Sociology 105,4: :913-956.
Schuman, Howard, Barry Schwartz, and Hannah d’Arcy. 2005. "Elite Revisionists and Popular
Beliefs Christopher Columbus, Hero or Villain?" Public Opinion Quarterly 69,1:2-29.
Schwartz, Barry. 2009. "Collective forgetting and the symbolic power of oneness: The Strange
Apotheosis of Rosa Parks." Social Psychology Quarterly 72,2:123-142.
Seidman, Gay. 2001. "Guerrillas in their midst: Armed struggle in the South African Anti-
Apartheid Movement." Mobilization 6,2: 111-127.
Taylor, Verta, Leila J Rupp, and Joshua Gamson. 2005. "Performing protest: Drag shows as
tactical repertoire of the gay and lesbian movement." Research in Social Movements,
Conflicts and Change 25:105-137.
Wagner-Pacifici, Robin and Barry Schwartz. 1991. "The Vietnam Veterans Memorial:
Commemorating a Difficult Past." American Journal of Sociology 97,2: 376-420.

Movement Processes

The political consequences of social movements

E Amenta, N Caren, E Chiarello… - … Annual Review of Sociology, 2010 -

 

Social Movement Organizational Collaboration: Networks of Learning and the Diffusion of Protest Tactics, 1960–19951

DJ Wang, SA Soule - American journal of sociology, 2012 

Activism as a Career, Calling, and Way of Life

Reference 2 - 0.09% Coverage

 Presidential Address: The Art of Activism..

Reference 3 - 0.20% Coverage

Political Reform and the Historical Trajectories of U.S. Social Movements in the Twentieth Century

Reference 4 - 0.32% Coverage

Ethical and Political Challenges of Participatory Action Research in the Academy: Reflections on Social
Movements and Knowledge Production in South Africa


Reference 6 - 0.21% Coverage

Parading Protest: Orange Parades in Northern Ireland and Temperance Parades in Antebellum
America 93

Reference 7 - 0.26% Coverage

HOW DO VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS FOSTER PROTEST? THE ROLE OF ORGANIZATIONAL
INVOLVEMENT ON INDIVIDUAL PROTEST PARTICIPATION.

Reference 8 - 0.12% Coverage

Playing and Protesting: Sport as a Vehicle for Social Change

Reference 9 - 0.22% Coverage

How Strong Are Strong Ties? The Conditional Effectiveness Of Strong Ties In Protest Recruitment
Attempts

Reference 10 - 0.16% Coverage

Protestival: Global Days of Action and Carnivalized Politics in the Present..

Reference 11 - 0.22% Coverage

Protest and Policymaking: Explaining Fluctuation in Congressional Attention to Rights Issues, 1960-
1986.

Reference 12 - 0.43% Coverage

Walker, E. T., & Mccarthy, J. D. (2010). Legitimacy, strategy, and resources in the survival of community-based organizations. Social Problems, 57(3), 315-340. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/sp.2010.57.3.315

Reference 13 - 0.26% Coverage

How Social Movements Do Culture Roy, William G. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society23.2-3 (Sep 2010): 85-98.

Reference 14 - 0.49% Coverage

Nathanson, C. A. (1999). Social movements as catalysts for policy change: The case of smoking and guns. Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 24(3), 421-488. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/60073313?accountid=10349

Reference 15 - 0.38% Coverage

Doing Democracy: The Social Psychological Mobilization and Consequences of Collective Action
Thomas, Emma F; Louis, Winnifred R. Social Issues and Policy Review7.1 (Jan 2013): 173-200.

Reference 16 - 0.32% Coverage

Transforming Citizenship: The Subjective Consequences of Local Political Mobilization
Meyer, Rachel. Political Power and Social Theory23 (2012): 147-188. 

Reference 17 - 0.42% Coverage

A Social Movement Generation: Cohort and Period Trends in Protest Attendance and Petition Signing
Caren, Neal; Ghoshal, Raj Andrew; Ribas, Vanesa. American Sociological Review76.1 (Feb 2011): 125-151.




Animal Rights


Shifting Symbolic Boundaries: Cultural Strategies of the Animal Rights Movement

Reference 2 - 0.13% Coverage

Moral Emotions and Social Activism: The Case of Animal Rights

Reference 3 - 0.18% Coverage

Framing the Issue: Religion, Secular Ethics and the Case of Animal Rights Mobilization

Reference 4 - 0.50% Coverage

Walby, K., & Monaghan, J. (2011). Private eyes and public order: Policing and surveillance in the suppression of animal rights activists in canada. Social Movement Studies, 10(1), 21-37. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14742837.2011.545225

Reference 5 - 0.42% Coverage

5.  Munro, L. (2012). The animal rights movement in theory and practice: A review of the sociological literature. Sociology Compass, 6(2), 166-181. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-9020.2011.00440.x

Reference 6 - 0.44% Coverage

Munro, L. (2001). Caring about blood, flesh, and pain: Women's standing in the animal protection movement. Society & Animals, 9(1), 43-61. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/60490918?accountid=10349

Reference 7 - 0.24% Coverage

 “Recruiting Strangers and Friends: Moral Shocks and Social Networks in Animal Rights and Anti-Nuclear Protests,”

Reference 8 - 0.41% Coverage

Jacobsson, K., & Lindblom, J. (2013). Emotion work in animal rights activism: A moral-sociological perspective. Acta Sociologica (London), 56(1), 55-68. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0001699312466180

Reference 9 - 0.43% Coverage

Wrenn, C. L. (2013). Resonance of moral shocks in abolitionist animal rights advocacy: Overcoming contextual constraints.Society & Animals, 21(4), 379-394. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685306-12341271



Education

Hotbeds of activism: Locations of student protest

N Van Dyke - Social Problems, 1998 - JSTOR
Crossing movement boundaries: Factors that facilitate coalition protest by American college students, 1930-1990
N Van Dyke
Social Problems 50 (2), 226-250

Protest cycles and party politics: The effects of elite allies and antagonists on student protest in the United States, 1930-1990
N Van Dyke
States, parties, and social movements, 226-245

Pathways to Collective Protest: Calculation, Identification, or Emotion? A Critical Analysis of the Role of GroupBased Anger in Social Movement Participation

S Stürmer, B Simon - Journal of Social Issues, 2009 - Wiley Online Library

Reference 2 - 0.44% Coverage

"Just say No": Organizing Against Militarism in Public Schools................................................................. 69
52. Students for Peace: Contextual and Framing Motivations of Antiwar Activism

Reference 3 - 0.22% Coverage

The Discursive Turn in School Desegregation: National Patterns and a Case Analysis of Cleveland,
1973-1998

Reference 4 - 0.18% Coverage

Social networks and student activism: on the politicising effect of campus connections

Reference 5 - 0.25% Coverage

Reconciling Research, Rallies, and Citizenship: Reflections on Youth-Led Diversity Workshops and
Intercultural Alliances.

Reference 6 - 0.16% Coverage

Manufacturing Dissent: Labor Revitalization, Union Summer and Student Protest

Reference 7 - 0.29% Coverage

Policing Disorderly Campus Protests and Convivial Gatherings: The Interaction of Threat, Social
Organization, and First Amendment Guarantees

Reference 8 - 0.22% Coverage

The Microlevel Discourse Of Social Movement Framing: Debating Antiwar Protests On A University
Listserv.

Reference 9 - 0.15% Coverage

THE COLLEGE SPORTS REFORM MOVEMENT: Reframing the 'Edutainment' Industry.

Reference 10 - 0.36% Coverage

The Rebirth of the Chicago Teachers Union and Possibilities for a Counter-Hegemonic Education Movement
Gutstein, Eric; Lipman, Pauline. Monthly Review65.2 (Jun 2013): 1-10.

Reference 11 - 0.38% Coverage

Schools for Democracy: Labor Union Participation and Latino Immigrant Parents' School-Based Civic Engagement
Terriquez, Veronica.American Sociological Review76.4 (Aug 2011): 581-601.

Reference 12 - 0.41% Coverage

Crossley, N. (2008). Social networks and student activism: On the politicising effect of campus connections. Sociological Review,56(1), 18-38. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954X.2008.00775.x

Reference 13 - 0.47% Coverage

"If There is No Struggle, There is No Progress": Transformative Youth Activism and the School of Ethnic Studies
Cabrera, Nolan L; Meza, Elisa L; Romero, Andrea J; Cintli Rodriguez, Roberto.The Urban Review45.1 (Mar 2013): 7-22.

Reference 14 - 0.38% Coverage

Schools for Democracy: Labor Union Participation and Latino Immigrant Parents' School-Based Civic Engagement
Terriquez, Veronica. American Sociological Review76.4 (Aug 2011): 581-601.



Environment

Managing Dissent: How Swarthmore College's Administration and Board of Managers Respond to Student Activists (student thesis of divestment campaign – see google scholar)


The politicization of climate change and polarization in the American public's views of global warming, 2001–2010

AM McCright, RE Dunlap - The Sociological Quarterly, 2011 - Wiley Online Library

 

Ecological Threat and the Founding of U.S. National Environmental Movement Organizations, 1962–1998

Erik W. Johnson and Scott Frickel
Social Problems
Vol. 58, No. 3 (August 2011), pp. 305-329

The Founding of Environmental Justice Organizations Across U.S. Counties during the 1990s and 2000s: Civil Rights and Environmental Cross-Movement Effects

Paul B. Stretesky, Sheila Huss, Michael J. Lynch, Sammy Zahran and Bob Childs
Social Problems
Vol. 58, No. 3 (August 2011), pp. 330-360

Power games: environmental protest, news media and the internet

EA Lester, B Hutchins - Media, Culture & Society, 2009 - ecite.utas.edu.au

National and global origins of environmental association

W Longhofer, E Schofer - American Sociological Review, 2010 - asr.sagepub.com

From metabolic rift to “metabolic value”: Reflections on environmental sociology and the alternative globalization movement

A Salleh - Organization & Environment

Reflexive Research Ethics for Environmental Health and Justice: Academics and Movement Building


Reference 3 - 0.22% Coverage

Rally the People: Building Local Environmental Justice Grassroots Coalitions and Enhancing Social
Capital*

Reference 4 - 0.16% Coverage

 Movement Organizations, Synergistic Tactics and Environmental Public Policy

Reference 5 - 0.20% Coverage

COMPETING FRAMES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION: INFLUENCES ON GRASSROOTS
COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION.

Reference 6 - 0.17% Coverage

Charting a Discursive Field: Environmentalists for U.S. Population Stabilization

Reference 7 - 0.56% Coverage

Lounsbury, M., Ventresca, M., & Hirsch, P. M. (2003). Social movements, field frames and industry emergence: A cultural-political perspective on US recycling. Socio-Economic Review, 1(1), 71-104. Retrieved fromhttp://search.proquest.com/docview/60486999?accountid=10349

Reference 8 - 0.39% Coverage

Beehner, L. (2013). Cycles of protest: How urban cyclists act like insurgents. Theory in Action, 6(2), 52-86. Retrieved fromhttp://search.proquest.com/docview/1373428391?accountid=10349



Labor / Sweatshops

Global governance and labor rights: Codes of conduct and anti-sweatshop struggles in global apparel factories in Mexico and Guatemala

CA Rodriguez-Garavito - Politics & Society, 2005

Multinationals and anti-sweatshop activism

A Harrison, J Scorse - The American Economic Review,

The AntiSweatshop Movement: Constructing Corporate Moral Agency in the Global Apparel Industry

R DeWinter - Ethics & International Affairs, 2001

Students and the AntiSweatshop Movement

AJ Cravey – Antipode

The student anti-sweatshop movement: Limits and potential

JR Mandle - The annals of the American academy of political and …, 2000 

Workers of the world unite? The contemporary anti-sweatshop movement and the struggle for social justice in the Americas

R Armbruster-Sandoval - Work and Occupations, 2005


Weak Coffee: Certification and Co-Optation in the Fair Trade Movement

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Insurgent Images: Genre Selection and Visual Frame Amplification in IWW Cartoon Art.

Reference 3 - 0.18% Coverage

Laws of Attraction: Regulatory Arbitrage in the Face of Activism in Right-to-Work States

Reference 4 - 0.15% Coverage

 Interaction Ritual Chains and the Mobilization of Conscientious Consumers

Reference 5 - 0.23% Coverage

Union Threat, Countermovement Organization, and Labor Policy in the States, 1944-1960..................... 100

Reference 6 - 0.21% Coverage

Movements, Aesthetics, and Markets in Literary Change: Making the American Labor Problem Novel... 104





Food

Breaking the Food Chains: An Investigation of Food Justice Activism

AH Alkon, KM Norgaard - Sociological Inquiry, 2009

Frame Brokerage in the Pure Food Movement, 1879-1906.

Reference 2 - 0.22% Coverage

Cultural Modeling in Two Eras of U.S. Food Protest: Grahamites (1830s) and Organic Advocates
(1960s-
70s

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Lee, R. P. (2013). The politics of international agri-food policy: Discourses of trade-oriented food security and food sovereignty. Environmental Politics, 22(2), 216-234. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2012.730266

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 Raynolds, L. T. (2012). Fair trade: Social regulation in global food markets. Journal of Rural Studies, 28(3), 276-287. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2012.03.004

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Fixing our Global Food System: Food Sovereignty and Redistributive Land Reform
Rosset, Peter. Monthly Review61.3 (Jul 2009): 114-128. 


Food sovereignty, urban food access, and food activism: contemplating the connections through examples from Chicago

DR Block, N Chávez, E Allen, D Ramirez - Agriculture and Human Values

Saving Food: food preservation as alternative food activism

MA Click, R Ridberg - Environmental Communication, 2010

Learning democracy through food justice movements

CZ Levkoe - Agriculture and Human Values, 2006

Beyond recruitment: Predictors of differential participation in a national antihunger organization

SE Barkan, SF Cohn, WH Whitaker - Sociological Forum, 1995

Activists against hunger: Membership characteristics of a national social movement organization

SF Cohn, SE Barkan, WH Whitaker - Sociological Forum, 1993

'Waving the banana'at capitalism: Political theater and social movement strategy among New York's 'freegan'dumpster divers

AV Barnard - Ethnography, 2011 


Criminal Justice

The Determinants of Executions since 1951: How Politics, Protests, Public Opinion, and Social
Divisions Shape Capital Punishment

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. Wooldredge, J. (2012). Distinguishing race effects on pre-trial release and sentencing decisions. Justice Quarterly, 29(1), 41-75. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07418825.2011.559480

Sociological Criminology and the Mythology of Hispanic Immigration and Crime
John Hagan and Alberto Palloni
Social Problems
Vol. 46, No. 4 (Nov., 1999), pp. 617-632

Dollars, Sense, and Penal Reform: Social Movements and the Future of the Carceral State
Gottschalk, Marie. Social Research74.2 (Jul 2007): 669-694.

Criminal Justice System Reform and Wrongful Conviction
Zalman, Marvin. Criminal Justice Policy Review17.4 (Dec 2006): 468-492.

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The Birth and Maturation of Hate Crime Policy in the United States
American behavioral scientist [0002-7642] Grattet, Ryken yr:2001 vol:45 iss:4 pg:668 -696

Reference 4 - 0.35% Coverage

HATE CRIME REPORTING AS A SUCCESSFUL SOCIAL MOVEMENT OUTCOME
McVeigh, Rory; Bjarnason, Thoroddur; Welch, Michael R. American Sociological Review68.6 (Dec 2003): 843-867.





Peace

Oppositional Identities: The Military Peace Movement's Challenge to Pro-Iraq War Frames

Reference 2 - 0.22% Coverage

Pursuing Political Persuasion: War and Peace Frames in the United States after September 11th.......... 105

Reference 3 - 0.23% Coverage

Alliance Building across Social Movements: Bridging Difference in a Peace and Justice Coalition.......... 107

Reference 4 - 0.44% Coverage

The Coalition of the Unwilling: Contentious Politics, Political Opportunity Structures, and Challenges for the Contemporary Peace Movement
Carty, Victoria. Peace and Conflict Studies18.1 (Apr 2011): 79-115.


Mobilizing Gender to Promote Peace: The Case of Machsom Watch


Beamish, Thomas D., Harvey Molotch, and Richard Flacks. 1995. “Who supports the troops?
Vietnam, the Gulf War, and the Making of Collective Memory.” Social Problems 42,3: 344-360.


Theory


Reference 13 - 0.26% Coverage

PROTEST AND POLITICAL OPPORTUNITIES
Meyer, David S. Annual Review of Sociology30 (2004): 125-145.

Reference 19 - 1.19% Coverage


Collective identity and social movements
Polletta, Francesca; Jasper, James M. Annual Review of Sociology27 (2001): 283-305.


Framing processes and social movements: An overview and assessment
Benford, Robert D; Snow, David A. Annual Review of Sociology26 (2000): 611-639.



Was it worth the effort? The outcomes and consequences of social movements
Giugni, Marco G. Annual Review of Sociology24 (1998): 371-393.