130 likes | 314 Views
CONFLICT: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS & COLLECTIVE ACTION. Social Movement - Collective actions by relatively powerless challenger groups using extra-institutional means to promote or resist social change (political, cultural, economic, ethnic, sexual)
E N D
CONFLICT: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS & COLLECTIVE ACTION Social Movement - Collective actions by relatively powerless challenger groups using extra-institutional means to promote or resist social change (political, cultural, economic, ethnic, sexual) Civil Rights vs KKK; Pro-life vs Pro-choice; 2nd Amendment vs Handgun control Social Movement Organization (SMO) - A named formal organization engaged in actions to advance a movement’s goals Movements often have numerous SMOs pursuing overlapping change agendas. What differences in the goals & tactics of these environmental SMOs? Greenpeace; Sierra Club; Audubon Society; Nature Conservancy; World Wildlife Federation; Friends of Earth; Natural Resources Defense Council; Earth Now!; Earth Liberation Front; …
Old & New Social Movements Major 19th & 20th c. social movements were national struggles for independence from colonial rule (Norway, India, Algeria) and working-class movements for union collective bargaining rights. U.S. Civil Rights Movement of 1950-60s was a new type of movement based on social-groupidentities. Deprived minorities sought rights of political inclusion: Latinos, Native Americans, women, gays & lesbians, aged, disabled, ... With post-industrialization, many New Social Movements emerged around cultural values, lifestyles & middle-class interests: human rights, environmental, peace/anti-war, social justice, consumer protection, animal liberation, … Some new social movements draw international participants and rely on transnational networks to achieve goals
Success is Becoming an Insider Over its life cycle, a SMO may change from radical outsider to accepted political insider. William Gamson (1975) found that centralized and bureaucratized SMOs have better chances of success (gaining recognition & acceptance). Movements with complex org’l structures can wage stronger action campaigns. But, as a movement wins legitimacy and resources, it runs a risk of cooptation – being bought-off by minor concessions from its targets. Leaders become diverted into running orgs and neglecting the original goals; e.g., building homeless shelters instead of solving root causes of homelessness. Give an example of a SMO that transformed into a bureaucratic organization, thus compromising the purity of its struggle? Is Michel’s “Iron Law of Oligarchy” the inevitable fate of SMOs? How do social networks – among activists & SMOs – constrain social movements that drift away from their ideals?
Penetrating the Polity When SMOs gain recognition, legitimacy, & access to the polity, they cease to be outside challengers. Transformed into institutionalized interest groups, they now compete to influence state policies, using conventional political tactics, e.g., campaign donations and lobbying. SMO #1 Government SMO #2 SMO #3 Interest Group #1 IG #2 IG #3
Network Recruiting for Collection Action Dense networks provide pre-existing channels for recruiting participants and micro-mobilization for collective action. Movement activists target friends, family, coworkers whose shared social identities & attitudinal affinities for movement values and goals may predispose them to participate. High-risk/cost activism raises barriers to mobilizing SM supporters: Rational decision is not to participate when perceived low success is outweighed by potentially heavy costs; e.g., police violence or losing a job. But networks can offset negative rational calculations, if people value preserving or forging strong social ties to SM adherents. To assure compliant control,religious cultsoften recruit weakly tied persons & force members to cut links to family and friends.
Mississippi Freedom Summer Doug McAdam’s SM recruitment model emphasized strong identification with values, prior activism, and integration in supportive networks. Evidence for this model came from 961 applicants to SNCC’s 1964 MS Freedom Summer black-voter registration drive. Compared to 241 who withdrew, the 720 who went to Mississippi had more org’l affiliations, higher levels of past civil rights activity, more extensive and stronger prior ties to other Freedom Summer participants. “The differences are especially pronounced in the two strong tie categories, with participants listing more than twice the number of volunteers and nearly three times the number of activists as the withdrawals.”(McAdam 1986; see also McAdam 1988; Fernandez & McAdam 1988; McAdam & Fernandez 1990; McAdam and Paulsen 1993).
A Political-Process Model McAdams’ (1982) political-process model explains both the rise and the decline of U.S. black protest movement with three components: 1) Political Opportunity: greater receptivity to change demands 2) Cognitive Liberation: challengers’ subjective experiences of shifting political conditions giving them a “new sense of efficacy” 3) Indigenous Organizational Strength: “structural potential” of challengers to mobilize & take advantage of political opportunity • Rapid growth 1931-45 of three types of institutions “gave blacks the org’l strength needed to generate a campaign of collective insurgency” in 1954-67: • Black churches: ministers and their congregations • Southern Black colleges: college students • Southern chapters of NAACP: activists & lawyers • Sit-ins coordinated thru a “well-development communication network linking SBC campuses into a loosely integrated institutional network” (1982:138) Andrews & Biggs’ (2006) event history diffusion of 1960 Southern sit-ins found SMO activist cadres played major role. But, “little evidence that social networks acted as channels for diffusion among cities” (athletic leagues!). Instead, news media conveyed crucial info about protests in other locales.
The Global Anti-Capitalist Movement During the 1990s, an anti-capitalist movement began challenging globalization of benefit only to developed nations & corporations. • Inspired by the Indians of Chiapas, Mexico,People’s Global Action <www.nadir.org/nadir/initiativ/agp/> targets transnational institutions allegedly undermining local community control and decision-making: • World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), G8 Summit, World Economic Forum, World Trade Organization (WTO), … Computer-supported SMsdeploy “new digital technologies to coordinate actions, build networks, practice media activism, and physically manifest their emerging political ideals” (Juris 2005) Decentralized SMO networks coordinate protests by socialists, greens, labor unions, anarchists, and indigenous peoples. They promote diverse anti-capitalist interests: privatized water rights, endangered species, child labor, forgiveness of national debts, …
Collective Behavior Social movement action is one example of diverse forms of collective behavior, including fads, rumors, strikes, panics, rubber-necking, football riots, lynch mobs, herd stampedes… Gabriel Tarde and Gustav Le Bon tried to understand collective behaviors as mass social psychology. The Laws of Imitation and the dynamics of a “group mind” could explain the apparently irrational aspects of collective actions. Contemporary collective action models seek to explain how behaviors diffuse among actors in a collective context, while emphasizing how decisions to participate involve the rational choices of interdependent decision-makers. The eruption and spread of collective behaviors depends on relations within a group and on the imitators’ identification with the instigators.
Threshold Models The decision whether to join a collective action can be analyzed as a threshold process. Derived from percolation theory, a critical threshold (tipping point) generates an aggregated critical mass: below the threshold, a collective action will fail; but if mass exceeds the threshold, collective action can grow exponentially. In a crowd, ego’s decision to riot depends on others’ actions. Although instigators start to riot before anyone else does, others join only if each perceives a specific critical N (or X%) of troublemakers. Small shifts in personal thresholds can yield diverse group outcomes. Mark Granovetter’s (1978) threshold model linked individuals’ behaviors to their perceptions of the aggregate level of action. The probability distribution of everyone’s thresholds determines whether an entire crowd reaches the critical mass required for rapidly escalating and widespread collective action.
Individual assumed to be rational, subjective expected utility maximizers. “The threshold is simply that point where the perceived benefits to an individual of doing the thing in question (here joining the riot) exceed the perceived costs” (p. 1422). • Formal model seeks to predict, from the set of individual thresholds, the ultimate numbers of rioters and nonrioters. For example, if the large majority of on-lookers must observe more than half the crowd rioting before they would join, then the riot will fizzle.
Precipitating Urban Riots The major predictor of size & severity of 1960s urban riots was the absolute size of a city’s black population (Spilerman 1976). Can thresholds explain this city-size differential? “..a city has, each time a crowd gathers, the same probability of reaching this particular equilibrium [number of rioters]. … If this probability is, say, .10, … then we may think of each incident as a Bernoulli trial with probability of success (of a large riot) of .10.” In a small city with only one incident, no riot occurs 90% of time; but in a larger city with 10 incidents, the chance of no riot falls to (.90)10 = .35, even though the distribution of thresholds is the same” (Granovetter 1978) How to incorporate networks into threshold models? Lower-threshold persons mobilized by a few key alters, higher-threshold persons by large aggregate participation. Strong links mobilize participation if low thresholds, weak links mobilize if high thresholds (Chwe 1999).
References Andrews, Kenneth T. and Michael Biggs. 2006. “The Dynamics of Protest Diffusion: Movement Organizations, Social Networks, and News Media in the 1960 Sit-Ins.” American Sociological Review 71:752-777. Fernandez Roberto M. and Doug McAdam. 1988. “Social Networks and Social Movements: Multiorganizational Fields and Recruitment to Mississippi Freedom Summer.” Sociological Forum 3:357-382. Gamson, William A. 1990 [1975]. The Strategy of Social Protest. 2nd Ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. Granovetter, Mark. 1978. “Threshold Models of Collective Behavior.” American Journal of Sociology 83:1420-1443. Juris, Jeffrey S. 2005. “The New Digital Media and Activist Networking within Anti-Corporate Globalization Movements.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 597:89-208. König, Thomas. 1999. “Patterns of Movement Recruitment.” Paper presented to American Sociological Association meeting. Le Bon, Gustav. 1895. La psychologie des foules (The Crowd). Paris: Félix Alcan. McAdam, Doug. 1988. “Recruitment to High-Risk Activism: The Case of Freedom Summer.” American Journal of Sociology 92:64-90. McAdam, Doug. 1999 [1982]. Political Process and the Development of Black Insurgency, 1930-1970. 2d edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. McAdam, Doug and Roberto M. Fernandez. 1990. “Microstructural Bases of Recruitment to Social Movements.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change 12:1-33. McAdam, Doug and Ronnelle Paulsen. 1993. “Specifying the Relationship between Social Ties and Activism.” American Journal of Sociology 99:640-667. Spilerman, Seymour. 1976. “Structural Characteristics of Cities and Severity of Racial Disorders.” American Sociological Review 41:771-793. Tarde, Gabriel. 1890. Les lois de l’imitation (The Laws of Imitation). Paris: Félix Alcan.