Index
2022; Emerald Publishing Limited; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1108/s0163-786x20220000046012
ISSN1875-7871
Tópico(s)Urbanization and City Planning
ResumoCitation (2022), "Index", Leitz, L. (Ed.) Race and Space (Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Vol. 46), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 205-210. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0163-786X20220000046012 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2022 Lisa Leitz. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX ABC, 25–26 Advocacy, 92 for reparations, 20–21 African Diaspora social movements, 20–21 Alternatives for Community and Environment (ACE), 46–48 American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), 67 in combatting police violence, 67–70 of Missouri, 79 American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri (ACLU/EM), 67, 69–70, 72, 74 American Descendants of Slavery Advocacy Foundation (ADOS Advocacy Foundation), 24 American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), 126–127 Animal rights, 16 Anti-capitalist politics, 19–20 Anti-imperialist politics, 19–20 Anti-prison movement, 88 Anti-racist politics, 19–20 Anti-war efforts, 16 Armed conflict, 142 Authoritarian regime, 174–175, 177 Average marginal effects (AMEs), 153–155 Backlash effect, 178, 186 Bakersfield, 123–125 Black anti-colonial struggle, 18–19 Black Feminist tradition, 16–17 Black freedom struggle, 18–19 Black Lives Matter (BLM), 1 Global Network organization, 27–28 historical and theoretical correctives, 2–6 protests, 2 racialized issues, 3–5 space as identity, 5–6 Black Panther Party, 20 Black Power, 2–3 demobilization, 20 movements, 11–12 Black Radical Tradition, 14–15 Black social movements, 13–17 Black Studies, 3, 12–13 “Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act” of 2005, 110 Boston Workers Alliance (BWA), 47–48 Building Healthy Communities (BHC), 122–123 Campaign endurance, 113–114 Carceral state, 16 Central Valley. See San Joaquin Valley of California Chile, 174, 180, 183 Chinese Progressive Association (CPA), 46–48 Christian Democrats Party (CDP), 181–182, 190 Churches, 113 Citizenship, 4–5 City Life Vida Urbana (CLVU), 46–48 Civil rights, 17–20 Civil Rights Movement (CRM), 2–3, 11–13, 17–18, 20 Class, 2 positioning, 6 Classical studies, 143 Climate change, 142 definitions, data, and preliminary evidence, 146–152 evidence, 152–165 literature review and motivation, 143–146 CNN, 25–26 Coalitions, 114–115 lack of, 122–123 Coercive repression, 19–20 Collective action, 113 Combahee River Collective, 16–17 Communist Party of Chile (CPCh), 181–182 Communities for a New California (CNC), 122–123 Community based organizations (CBOs), 123 Community organizing, 114, 121 Computer-assisted data analysis, 5 Conflict, 146 Congregations Building Communities (CBC), 124 Congressional H.R.40 Cosponsor Signatures, 26–27 Congruence Model, 38–39 analysis, 44 Consumer Price Index (CPI), 186 Criminal justice system, 3–4 Critical race theory, 3, 38 Critical Race Theory/Intersectionality framework (CRT/I framework), 38–39 data collection, 39 Cronbach’s alpha test, 45 “Crowding out” hypothesis, 90 Culture, 11–12 Cycles of mobilization, 178 Demand for more favorable conditions, 143 Democratic Alliance (DA), 181–182 Dependency, 90–91 Deservingness of police violence, 80 Development, 149 Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM ACT), 117 Devolution, 88 Dirty Wars, 181 Disability rights, 16 Dispossession, 14–15 Durbin–Watson statistic, 151–152 Dynamics of Contention (DAC), 183–184 Econometrics, 142 analysis, 5–6 Economic grievance, 143 Emancipatory social movements, 12–13 Environmental issues, 16 Ethnic dominancy, 143 Ethnic fragmentation, 148 Ethnic heterogeneity, 148 Ethnicity, 2, 4–5 operation, 2 Executive Director (ED), 44 Fatal police shootings, 72 Fatal-Encounters (FE), 72–73 FBI COINTELPRO program, 20 Fraternal Order of Police, 79–80 Frente Indígena de Organizacíones Binacionales (FIOB), 126–127 Fresno, 125–130 Gay and lesbian rights, 16 GDP growth, 149 “General Strike” of enslaved men and women’s mass desertions, 14–15 Geographical information system (GIS), 66, 74 Global policy agenda, 142 Government-funded nonprofits, 90–91 Grassroots organizers, 112–113 Haitian Revolution of 1791, 14–15 Homeland Security Chairman Peter King (R-NY), 110 Hometown Associations (HTAs), 113 House Judiciary Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI), 110 House of Representatives Bill 4437 (HR 4437), 110, 112, 119, 126 Immigrant service organizations, 113 Immigrant Spring of 2006, 109–110 Immigration, 121 Imperialist accumulation, 16 Intercept, The , 25–26 Intermediate level campaign endurance, 123–125 Internal armed conflict, 146 Internal consistency and reliability for RC surveys, 45 International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), 79–80 Interrupted Time Series analysis (ITS analysis), 185, 187, 190–191 Intersectionality, 3, 38 Labor super-exploitation, 16 Labor unions, 113 Latino Community Roundtable (LCR), 124 Latinos in Central Valley, 117–118 Leadership Team (LT), 44 Legal estrangement, 70–71 Logit model, 153–155 Looting, 143 Macro-historical processes, 11–12 Macro-level theorizing of race in social movements, 12–13 Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front (MRPF), 182 Marronnage, 14–15 Marxist analysis, 13–15 May Day protests, 128 McAdam’s approach, 17–18 Mediating structures, 89 Memorialization, 2 Mexican American Political Association (MAPA), 127 Microclimates of racial meaning, 70–71 Mobilization, 174, 176 in authoritarian Chile, 180–183 in authoritarian regimes, 175–177 measuring impact of repression over mobilization, 183–187 Modesto, 123–125 Movement for Black Lives (M4BL), 27 policy platform, 16 Music, 11–12 National Coalition for Reparations in America (N’COBRA), 23 National Days of Protests (NDPs), 181 National police reform, 2 Nationalistic grievance, 143 Neighbors United for a Better East Boston (NUBE), 47–48 New England United for Justice (NEU4J), 47–48 New Social Movements (NSMs), 16, 38 New York Times, The , 25–26 “No” campaign, 182 Nonprofit organization, 88 Nonprofit prison reentry organization, 88–89, 91 case and methods, 91–93 findings, 93–100 Nonviolent civil resistance in authoritarian contexts, 176–177 OLA RAZA, 121 Organizational ethnography, 93 Organizational structures, 37–39 Organizational theory, 3, 38 Organizations, 38–39, 113 Peace fragility, 148 Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), 146 People Improving Communities through Organizing (PICO), 124 People’s Democratic Movement (PDM), 181–182 Per Capita GDP, 149 Perpetual militarism, 16 Pinochet, 181–182 Police Practice Inventory (PPI), 71 Police violence, 4, 66 current study, 72 historical and current persistence, 67–70 measuring, 71 methods, 72–73 results, 73–79 Policy threats, 111–112, 119–120 Political Coordinator (PC), 44 Political instability, 147–148 Political opportunities, 11–12, 17–18 structure, 111 Political pacification, 93–94 Political process model, 17–18 Population, 148–149 size under threat, 112–113 Postindustrial neoliberalism, 16 Poverty, 66 Power, 6 Praxis, 11–12 Preexisting organizations, 113–114, 120 Prison reentry, 88–89 Prison rehabilitation nonprofits, 4 Privatization, 88 Protest, 6 campaigns, 176–177 cycle, 178 Protest–Repression nexus, 174 measuring impact of repression over mobilization, 183–187 mobilization and repression in authoritarian Chile, 180–183 repression and mobilization in authoritarian regimes, 175–177 results, 187–191 time dynamics in, 177–180 Proto-racialization processes, 14–15 Qualitative analysis, 43–44 Qualitative findings, 45 Race, 2, 4–5, 38, 72 operation, 2 in social conflict and social movements, 1 Racial capitalism, 13, 17, 20 historical sociology, 13–17 Racial directions, 13–14 Racial dynamics, 13 Racial justice, 2 Racial/ethnic minority, 67 Racialized issues, 3–5 Racism, 2 Racist police humor, 70 Radical Black internationalism, 19–20 Regime durability, 147–148 Relational coordination survey analysis, 44–45 Relational Coordination Theory (RCT), 38–40 Religious reform, 143 Reparation movement, 20–28 Repertoires of contention, 14–15 Repression, 6, 174–176 in authoritarian Chile, 180–183 measuring impact of repression over mobilization, 183–187 and mobilization in authoritarian regimes, 175–177 Republic of New Africa, 20 Resource mobilization, 11–12 Reverse racism, 21–22 Revolutionary Action Movement, 20 Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR), 183 Right to the City Alliance (RTCA), 38, 41, 43 building, 45–46 organizational history and structure, 45–48 organizational structures, 46–47 socio-structural patterns within, 53–54 work, 48–50 Right to the City Boston (RTCB), 38, 41, 43, 46 coalition member groups, 47–48 organizational structures, 46–47 socio-structural patterns within, 53–54 work, 48–50 Right to the City National (RTCN), 43 Right to the City Vote (RTCV), 46–47 Rough terrain, 143, 148 RTC membership processes, 47–48 Safe , 89, 91–92, 96–97, 101–103 selfish program, 94–96 staffers’ politics, 99–100 surrogate representation, 97–99 Sampling bias, 142 San Joaquin Valley of California, 110 comparative case studies, 117–118 infrastructural dimensions, 113–115 intermediate level campaign endurance, 123–125 low enduring mobilization cities, 118–123 methods, 115–117 sustained mobilization cities, 125–130 threats and immigrant collective action, 111–113 Slave patrol systems, 66 Snowball sampling technique, 117 Social identity, 42–44 Social justice perspective, 40–41 Social location, 42–44 Social Movement Organizations (SMOs), 37–39, 43, 120 analytic approaches, 43–45 data collection, 41–42 organizational and socio-structural frameworks, 39–40 organizational findings, 48–53 research methodology, 40–43 social justice perspective, 40–41 socio-structural findings, 53–57 study and accountability, 57–59 Social movements, 37–38, 88–89, 177 analysis of racial justice movements, 3–4 campaign, 109–110 repression, 11–12, 17, 20 scholars, 2–3, 20 scholarship, 111 theory, 38 Social position, 42–44 Social ties and networks, 11–12 Socio-structural patterns within RTCA/B, 53–54 Sociological study of Black mobilization, 17–18 Sociology of social movements, 12–13 Space as identity, 5–6 STATA, 45 Stockton, 125–130 Storytelling, 11–12 Strategic Action for a Just Economy (SAJE), 46 Surrogate advocacy, 89 Sustained mobilization cities, 125–130 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), 55 Threats, 110 Time dynamics in protest–repression nexus, 177–180 Triangulation, 72 UC Merced Community and Labor Center (CLC), 122–123 United Farm Workers (UFW), 120–121 Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), 146 Urban spaces, 4–5 US Civil Rights Movement, 17–18 US internal stability, 19–20 Vicariate of Solidarity, 174 VOX, 25–26 Waves of contention, 178 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction Section I Race Racial Capitalism and Black Social Movements Inequities in Movement-Making: A Socio-Structural Organizational Analysis of a Movement Organization Case Section II Racialized Issues The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same: A Spatial Analysis of Historical and Contemporary Incidents of Police Violence Organizing a Weak Anti-Prison Movement? Surrogate Representation and Political Pacification at a Nonprofit Prison Reentry Organization Sustained Mobilization for Immigrant Rights: A Comparative Case Study of the San Joaquin Valley Section III Space Climatic Conditions and Internal Armed Conflicts: An Empirical Study It's All About Timing: Temporal Dynamics in the Protest–Repression Nexus in Pinochet's Chile, 1982–1989 Index
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