Index

Race and Space

ISBN: 978-1-80117-725-2, eISBN: 978-1-80117-724-5

ISSN: 0163-786X

Publication date: 24 October 2022

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2022), "Index", Leitz, L. (Ed.) Race and Space (Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Vol. 46), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, 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