*=New to this edition
Each Part opens with an Introduction.
Preface
Alternative Uses Course Grid
Contributor Biographies
INTRODUCTION: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: CONCEPTUAL AND THEORETICAL ISSUES
I. EMERGENCE: FACILITATING CONDITIONS
Part 1: Disruptions and Threats
* 1. Disrupting the "Quotidian": Reconceptualizing the Relationship Between Breakdown and the Emergence of Collective Action, David A. Snow, Daniel M. Cress, Liam Downey, and Andrew W. Jones
2. A Demographic/Structural Model of State Breakdown, Jack A. Goldstone
* 3. Structural Social Change and Mobilizing Effect of Threat: Explaining Levels of Patriot and Militia Organizing in the United States, Nella Van Dyke and Sarah A. Soule
Part 2: Political Opportunities
* 4. Political Opportunities and African-American Protest, 1948-1997, J. Craig Jenkins, David Jacobs, and Jon Agnone
5. New Social Movements and Political Opportunities in Western Europe, Hanspeter Kriesi, Ruud Koopmans, Jan Willem Duyvendak, and Marco G. Giugni
* 6. Labor Transnationalism and Global Governance: The Impact of NAFTA on Transnational Labor Relationships in North America, Tamara Kay
* 7. Opportunity Organizations and Threat-Induced Contention: Protest Waves in Authoritarian Settings, Paul D. Almeida
Part 3: Resources and Organizations
* 8. Mobilization at the Margins: Resources, Benefactors, and the Viability of Homeless Social Movement Organizations, Daniel M. Cress and David A. Snow
* 9. From Struggle to Settlement: The Crystallization of a Field of Lesbian/Gay Organizations in San Francisco, 1969-1973, Elizabeth A. Armstrong
* 10. Globalization and Transnational Social Movement Organizations, Jackie Smith
Part 4: Facilitative Spaces and Contexts
* 11. Ecologies of Social Movements: Student Mobilization During the 1989 Pro-Democracy Movement in Beijing, Dingxin Zhao
12. Black Southern Student Sit-In Movement: An Analysis of Internal Organization, Aldon Morris
* 13. Free Spaces, Collective Identity, and the Persistence of U.S. White Power Activism, Robert Futrell and Pete Simi
II. PROCESSES OF MICROMOBILIZATION
Part 5: Social Networks
* 14. Status, Networks, and Social Movement Participation: The Case of Striking Workers, Marc Dixon and Vincent J. Roscigno
* 15. Specifying the Relationship Between Social Ties and Activism, Doug McAdam and Ronnelle Paulsen
* 16. A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Conversion to Venezuelan Evangelicalism: How Networks Matter, David Smilde
Part 6: Interpretive Processes: Framing Processed
* 17. Ideology, Framing Processes, and Islamic Terrorist Movements, David A. Snow and Scott C. Byrd
* 18. Linking Mobilization Frames and Political Opportunities: Insights from Regional Populism in Italy, Mario Diani
* 19. Resonance and Radicalism: Feminist Framing in the Abortion Debates of the United States and Germany, Myra Max Ferree
* 20. From Protective to Equal Treatment: Legal Framing Processes and Transformation of the Women's Movement in the 1960s, Nicholas Pedriana
Part 7: The Social Psychology of Participation: Grievances, Identity, and Emotion
* 21. Grievance Formation in a Country in Transition: South Africa, 1994-1998, Bert Klandermans, Marlene Roefs, and Johan Oliver
* 22. "It Was Little A Fever". . .: Narrative and Identity in Social Protest, Francesca Polletta
* 23. Identity Work and Collective Action in a Repressive Context: Jewish Resistance on the "Aryan Side" of the Warsaw Ghetto, Rachel Einwohner
* 24. Persistent Resistance: Commitment and Community in the Plowshares Movement, Sharon Erikson Nepstad
III. MOVEMENT DYNAMICS
Part 8: Strategies and Tactics
* 25. Getting It Together in Burgundy, 1675-1975, Charles Tilly
26. Tactical Innovation and the Pace of Insurgency, Doug McAdam
* 27. Celebration and Suppression: The Strategic Uses of Identity by the Lesbian and Gay Movement, Mary Bernstein
28. The Success of the Unruly, William A. Gamson
Part 9: Extra-Movement Dynamics
* 29. Discursive Opportunities and the Evolution of Right-Wing Violence in Germany, Ruud Koopmans and Susan Olzak
* 30. Protest Under Fire? Explaining the Policing of Protest, Jennifer Earl, Sarah A. Soule, and John D. McCarthy
* 31. Coalitions and Political Context: U.S. Movements Against Wars in Iraq, David S. Meyer and Catherine Corrigall-Brown
Part 10: IntraMovement Dynamics
32. Social Movement Continuity: The Women's Movement in Abeyance, Verta Taylor
33. The Consequences of Professionalization and Formalization in the Pro-Choice Movement, Suzanne Staggenborg
* 34. The Structure of Charismatic Mobilization: A Case Study of Rebellion During the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Joel Andreas
* 35. Diffusion and Modularity, Sidney Tarrow
IV. DO MOVEMENTS MATTER?
Part 11: Outcomes and Impacts
* 36. Feminist Generations? The Long-Term Impact of Social Movement Involvement on Palestinian Women's Lives, Frances S. Hasso
* 37. Movement Framing and Discursive Opportunity Structures: The Political Successes of the U.S. Women's Jury Movements, Holly J. McCammon, Courtney Sanders Muse, Harmony D. Newman, and Teresa M. Terrell
* 38. Age for Leisure? Political Mediation and the Impact of the Pension Movement on U.S. Old-Age Policy, Edwin Amenta, Neal Caren, and Sheera Joy Olasky
* 39. Social Movements and Policy Implementation: The Mississippi Civil Rights Movement and The War on Poverty, 1965 to 1971, Kenneth T. Andrews
References