Paratexto Acesso aberto

Index

2021; Emerald Publishing Limited; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1108/s0163-786x20210000044014

ISSN

1875-7871

Tópico(s)

Religion, Society, and Development

Resumo

Citation (2021), "Index", Leitz, L. (Ed.) Power and Protest (Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Vol. 44), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 203-207. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0163-786X20210000044014 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling (ASW), 152 Academia, 129–130 Actor status, 107 African National Congress (ANC), 125 Afrikaner anthropologists, 129–130 Afrikaner minority rule, 125–126 Alliance erosion, 130–132 “Alt. labor” strategies, 42–43 America’s Foundation, 176 American Federation of Labor (AFL), 40 Anti-whaling, 5, 153–155 Apartheid regime, 120 allies, survival, and effects of illegitimacy, 127–136 end of apartheid, 132–136 legitimacy, stability, and revolution, 121–123 methods, 123–124 rise and fall of, 124–127 Arab Spring, 11–15 aspect, 15–16 Arab Uprisings, 13, 17 Argentine dirty war, 99–105 Associational power, 3, 44–45, 47 Authoritarian regimes, 15 Authoritarianism, 24–25 Black Lives Matter (BLM), 1, 6 “Bombs, death, and ideology” approach, 100 British rule, 64 Brotherhood, 129–130 Bycatch , 158 Campus activism past research and theory on, 177–178 theorizing educational opportunity structures and outcomes of, 179–182 Campus Crusade for Christ, 176 Campus-based movements, 176–177 Christianity, 187–188 Civil conflict scholars, 67 Civil society, 50–51 Civil war, 64–65 Coalitional power, 46 Code of Conduct, 185 Collective action frames, 27–28 Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act (CAAA), 131, 133 Conflict, 64–65 Constitutional government in industry, 41 Constructive engagement, 132–133 Contract strike, 42 Conventional strikes, 37–38 Crisis of legitimacy, 120 Critical race theorists, 97–98 Cultural imperialism, 151–152 Democracy, 74 Democratic ideology, 74 Democratization, 74–75 Diagnostic framing, 27–28 Dignity reclamation of loved ones, 25–27 “Dirty war” in Argentina, 4 Discursive opportunity structures, 147–148 Dramatic outbursts in authoritarian regimes, 13–16 Dutch Reformed Church, 126, 129–130 Ecological extinction, 153–154 Economic model, 40–41 strikes, 37–38 Educational opportunity structures, 5–6, 177, 179–180, 192–195 Egyptian protestors, 27 “Endangered community” frame, 160–161 Ethnic or religious movements, 71–73 Ethno-epistemic assemblage, 149 Exclusive economic zone (EEZ), 151–152 Exile missions, 130 Exploitation, 44 Extinction frames, 153–154 Fast Food, 51–55 Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA), 190 Feminist social constructionist theory of power, 97 Field theory, 93–94 “Fight for $15” campaign, 38, 51 Financialization of economy, 49–50 Frame(s), 147–148 amplification, 154 bridging, 154 extension, 154 transformation, 154 of whaling and anti-whaling, 153–155 Framing, 3, 16, 147–149 Gaddafi’s rule, 24–25 Gallery of Repressors, 103–104 Gender-inclusive ideology, 68–69 Goraeya torawa , 161 Greenpeace, 149, 163 Grounded theory, 18–19 Heritage, 158 “Heritage” frame, 155 Higher education, 176 Historical legacies, 96 process tracing method, 98–99 Homosexual behavior, 181–182 Ideology, 67 Illegitimacy, 120 and alliance erosion, 130–132 allies, survival, and effects of, 127–136 effects of, 121 operationalizing, 124 Industrial relations (IR), 38 Institutional incorporation, 50 power, 46 theory, 96–97 Institutionalist critique, 42 Institutionalization, 42 Integrative prevention, 42 Integrity of governance from corrupt tyrants, 21–23 Intercollegiate Studies, 176 International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling (ICRW), 151–152 International relations, 127 International Whaling Commission (IWC), 146, 151–153 Jangsaengpo Defenders, 164 Judicial repression, 39–40, 42 Justice for Janitors strategy (JfJ strategy), 45–46 Korea, 149–150 Korean Federation of Environmental Movements (KFEM), 150 Korean whaling revival, 146–147, 150, 155–160 Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), 70 Labor mobilization, 44 movement, 38–39 scholars, 38 Las Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, 99–100 Leadership Institute, 176 League of Human Rights, 100–101 Legitimacy. See also Illegitimacy, 121–123 leverage, 46 relationality of legitimacy, 122–123 LGBTQ rights, 181 student groups, 180 Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam of Sri Lanka, 76–77 Linnean extinction, 153–154 Logistical power, 46 Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (LAANE), 53 Los Angeles County Federation of Labor (LACFL), 53 Marginalization, 95–99 Marginalized actors, 95 Marginalized mothers, 99–105 Marxism, 67 Marxist movements, 71–72 Marxist New People’s Army, 64 Mass mobilization, 11–12 Master frame, 12, 17 dramatic outbursts in authoritarian regimes, 13–16 meanings, 16–17 of reclamation, 12, 16–17 visual analysis, 17–21 Mobilization, 40, 44, 65, 95–99 lines of, 71 mobilization of discontent model, 67 Modern agency, 107 Moratorium on commercial whaling, 151 Moro Islamic Liberation Front, 64 Mothers of the Plaza Mayo, 98–100, 105, 107 Motivational framing, 27–28 Movement-specific frames, 154 Movements to expel foreign occupation, 71, 73 Multi-institutional analyses of political process, 98 Multilevel modeling process, 78 Multisclice imagining, 18–19 Nation reclamation, 24–25 National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 40, 50 National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), 41, 50 National Party (NP), 5, 120, 123 rise and fall of, 124–127 “Neo” institutional theories, 96–97 New Deal reformers, 41 New People’s Army, 64 Non-governmental organization (NGO), 98–99 Nonviolence, 64–65, 70–71, 92–93 robustness checks, 83–85 Nonviolent action, 68 Nonviolent and Violent Campaigns and Outcomes (NAVCO), 71, 75–76, 78 Nonviolent resistance, 68–69 power in, 92–95 Open coding, 21 Orbis , 191–192 Packwood-Magnuson Amendment, 151–152 People power, 6 campaign, 64 studies, 93 Period analysis, 106 Photographs, 13, 17–18, 26–27 limitations, 20–21 periodization and geographic location of, 19 Political invisibility, 101 Political opportunity structure, 146–147 Political process, 93–94 theory, 179 Political strikes, 131–132 Political violence, 67 Politics of memory, 103–104 Positional power, 44–45 Post-strike theory, 42–44 Power, 1 examining, 6 of institutions and tradition, 4–6 power-over approach, 100–102 resources, 3, 47 Power in Movement , 1 Power in nonviolent resistance, 92–95 Power resources approach (PRA), 38, 44–51 Pre-Gaddafi flag, 24–25 Prestige, 181 Private schools, 180 Private sector unions, 50 Pro-democracy campaigns, 3–4, 65–66 Prodemocracy movements, 71–72 Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), 42 Professional photographers, 19–20 Prognostic framing, 27–28 Protest, 64 Protestors, 25 Public schools, 180 Qualitative methods, 195 Rainbow Warrior, 161 Reagan administration, 132–133 Rebel groups, 66 Reclamation, 12 master frame, 17, 21–28 Recognition strikes, 42 Regime violence, 78 Relationality of legitimacy, 122–123 Religious colleges and universities, 180–181 Religious freedom, 176–177 controversy at Vanderbilt, 184–186 data and methodological approach, 182–184 educational opportunity structures and outcomes, 192–195 mobilizing for religious freedom at Vanderbilt, 186–189 outcomes, 189–192 past research and theory on campus activism, 177–178 theorizing educational opportunity structures and outcomes of campus activism, 179–182 Repression, 101, 106–107 Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change , 6 Resistance campaigns, 68, 75–76 Revolution, 120–123 Rooted cosmopolitans, 149 Rootedness, 152 “Save the Whales” campaigns, 154 SeaTac initiative, 53 Service Employees International Union (SEIU), 45–46, 54 Sharpian nonviolence theory, 98 Social change, 1 Social constructionist framework, 105–108 actor status, 107 repression, 106–107 stages of conflict, 106 strategies and tactics, 108 Social movement organizations (SMOs), 43 Social movements, 1, 16, 176 analysis, 42–44 Social protest, 14–15 South Africa, 120 South African business, 128 South African Communist Party (SACP), 127 South Korean government, 146 Soweto uprising, 125 Spatial-ontological study of assemblages, 149 Stability, 121–123 Statistical models, 66 Stellenbosch University, 129 Strategic capacity, 43 Strengths of professional photographs, 20 Strikes, 37–38 in context, 39–44 PRA, 44–51 in United States, 51–55 Structural power, 45 Sustainability, 153 Symbolic power, 45 Taft-Hartley amendments, 42 Tamil Tigers. See Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam of Sri Lanka Theorizing movement power, 2–4 TIME’S UP Legal Defense Fund, 54–55 Ulsan, 145–146 UN Security Council, 131 Union Générale des Travailleurs Tunisiens (UGTT), 14 Unions, 38 Vanderbilt, 182, 183 Vanderbilt Hustler , 189 Verstehen , 16 Violence, 65 theory, 70–75 Violent conflict, 66–68 Visual analysis, 17–21 Volkekunde , 129 Voluntarism, 40–41 Wealth, 181–182 Whale Culture Preservation Association (WCPA), 158–159 Whale Culture Zone (WCZ), 146 Whale embassy occupation in 2005, 160–165 Whale food culture, 159 Whale Occupation Embassy, 150 Whale-watching tourism, 165 Whaling, 145–146 frames of whaling and anti-whaling, 153–155 IWC and whaling conflict, 151–153 nations, 151 revival of Ulsan, 146 whale embassy occupation in 2005, 160–165 White minority rule, 125 Workplace bargaining power, 45 World-polity approach, 149 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction to Power and Protest, RSMCC Volume 44 Section I Theorizing the Power of Protestors The Reclamation Master Frame: A Visual Study of the Arab Uprisings Understanding Strikes in the 21ST Century: Perspectives from the United States Group Size and the Use of Violence by Resistance Campaigns: A Multilevel Study of Resistance Method Marginalization and Mobilizing Power in Nonviolent Social Movements Section II Power of Institutions and Tradition Illegitimacy, Political Stability, and the Erosion of Alliances: Lessons from the End of Apartheid in South Africa Whaling in Korea: Heritage, Framing, and Contention against International Norms Mobilizing for Religious Freedom: Educational Opportunity Structures and Outcomes of Conservative Christian Campus Activism Epilogue: Updates to Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change Index

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