Summary

This document discusses social movement theories, including Resource Mobilization Theory and New Social Movements. It includes information on relative deprivation, structural strain theory, and case studies like the Raging Grannies.

Full Transcript

Week 11B Social Movements ------------------------- - What does Resource Mobilization theory (RMT) focus on? - What are New Social Movements (NSMs)? - Written reflection 4 (note extended due date on dropbox) What is the relationship between deprivation and social movements? ---------------...

Week 11B Social Movements ------------------------- - What does Resource Mobilization theory (RMT) focus on? - What are New Social Movements (NSMs)? - Written reflection 4 (note extended due date on dropbox) What is the relationship between deprivation and social movements? ------------------------------------------------------------------ - Relative deprivation: \- "Intolerable gap between the social rewards people think they deserve & social rewards they (expect to) receive" What is Smelser's structural strain theory? ------------------------------------------- - Neil Smelser \- *The Theory of Collective Behaviour* (1962) - 6 Factors 1\) Structural conduciveness (ignore textbook definition) \- Permissiveness of social arrangements to generate movements \- Open or democratic society 2\) Structural strain \- Tensions, conflicts, deprivations and discrepancies 3\) Growth and spread of an explanation \- Generalized belief (ideology) 4\) Precipitating factors \- Triggers 5\) Mobilization for action \- Leadership 6\) (Lack of) social control \- Ineffective operation of control social movement What does resource mobilization theory (RMT) focus on? ------------------------------------------------------ - RMT \- McCarthy & Zald \- Critique of previous theory: did not acknowledge outsiders often just as important as insiders - Shift from: "WHY do people want change; WHEN will a movement be formed" to "HOW can people organize, pool resources, and wield them effectively" - Organization of resources key - Practical/tactical basis - Utilitarian logic: cost/benefit analysis - Membership/recruitment \- Bloc recruitment \- Recruit existing group as a whole - Framing & frame alignment \- "Issues must be 'framed' so that they resonate with the beliefs, feelings, and desires of potential recruits" - Free-rider problem \- Free-riders: benefit personally from movement success, but don't directly participate - Goal: Transform free-riders (and others) members \- Coercion (force or guilt) \- Incentives \- Selective incentives to movement entrepreneurs (paid staff): \- Salaries, prestige, power - Professionalization \- Fundraising \- Bureaucratization What are New Social Movements (NSMs)? ------------------------------------- - NSMs \- 1960s \- Not working class, but relatively educated, affluent populations \- Social media \- Universalistic (peace, environmental, LGBTQ rights) - NSMs = identity-oriented, "who" - RMT = strategy-oriented, "how" Case Study: The Raging Grannies [Video: The Raging Grannies ("Granny Power")](https://vimeo.com/126212302) Focus Questions - How do the Raging Grannies fit the NSM profile? - How do they use their "little old lady" identities strategically? - What about Black Lives Matter?

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