Index

Strategies and Outcomes

ISBN: 978-1-83797-934-9, eISBN: 978-1-83797-933-2

ISSN: 0163-786X

Publication date: 4 July 2024

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2024), "Index", Leitz, L. (Ed.) Strategies and Outcomes (Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Vol. 48), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-208. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0163-786X20240000048009

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Lisa Leitz. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abolitionist Vanguard (VAL)
, 108

“Abolitionist” activists
, 99, 110–111

Activism optics
, 51–57

Activists
, 23–24, 102

African American participation
, 14–15

Agitators
, 13

Alt-Right
, 43–44, 54

American Civil Rights Movement
, 130–131, 133

American democracy
, 127

American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
, 129

American Identity Movement (AIM)
, 48

American/U.S. South
, 127

Animal Principle (PA)
, 108

Animal rights movement
, 98, 108, 110

folk theories within
, 110–115

Animal Rights News Agency (ANDA)
, 108

Anticom
, 49, 55

Artic drilling
, 2

Auto-coding
, 77

Backstage
, 49

Barriers to student-led mobilizations
, 78–80

Base mission
, 14–19

spatial extension model
, 12

Birmingham campaign
, 28

Black veterans
, 14–15

Blackness
, 138–139

Brazil
, 99

animal rights movement and tactical disputes
, 108–110

data and methods
, 106–108

folk theories on social transformation
, 103–106

folk theories within animals rights movement
, 110–115

strategy and morality in tactical disputes
, 100–103

Brazilian Vegetarian Society (SVB)
, 108

Brigate Rosse
, 160

British Suffrage Movement (1905–1914)
, 13–14

Brown versus Board of Education
, 138

Campus culture
, 89–90

Canada
, 3

Canadian HEIs
, 70–71

Canadian higher education systems
, 71

Capital
, 3

Census data
, 134

Channies
, 57–58

Charlottesville 2. 0 server
, 53

Chicago freedom movement
, 30, 1965, 1967

Children’s Crusade
, 28

Churrasco (barbecue)
, 97–98

Civil Rights Act of 1964
, 23, 126, 133

Civil rights movement
, 12, 139, 147

Civil rights organizations
, 132

Civil society groups
, 159–160

Clausewitz of nonviolent warfare
, 14

Cognitive theory
, 15–16

Cognitive transformation
, 16

Collective identity
, 13–14, 87–88

Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
, 4, 25, 131–132

Context
, 126–128

Core cadre
, 23–24

Counterdemonstrators
, 55

Cultural sociologists
, 101–102

Cultural turn
, 101

Culture, implications for
, 88–89

De facto approach
, 126

De jure approach
, 126

Dialogical diffusion
, 13, 15–16

Diffusion
, 12

Discord
, 44–45, 50

Dramaturgical loyalty
, 42

Drivers to student-led mobilizations
, 80–84

networks among students
, 81–84

networks with faculty
, 80–81

Education(al) equity
, 149

Electoral activities/tactics
, 180

Ethnographic methods/ethnography
, 162

Extended case method
, 19

Facebook
, 45–46, 185

Failure/unsuccessful outcomes
, 158–159

Familiarity
, 102

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
, 138

Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR)
, 14–15

FEMEN
, 33

Fitness standards
, 57–59

Folk theories
, 99–100

within animals rights movement
, 110–115

on social transformation
, 3–4, 103, 106

Frame alignment
, 100

Frames
, 3–4

Framing perspective
, 100

Framing tactics
, 99–100

Free riders
, 128

Freedom Rides
, 25–27

Frontstage
, 49

400 pounders
, 57–58

4chan nationalists
, 57–58

4th Reich
, 44, 47–48

Gandhian praxis
, 2–3, 13

Gaúcho traditionalism
, 97–98, 109

General benefits hypothesis
, 127–128

Geographically dependent hypothesis
, 126–127

Goffman, Irving
, 3

Goffmanian sociology
, 40–41

Greenpeace
, 1

activists
, 1

Greensboro Four
, 23

Grievance
, 99

Group for the Abolition of Speciesism (GAE)
, 108

Habitus
, 103

Heterodox reform ideology
, 13

High school graduation (HSG)
, 136

Higher education (including college and university)
, 70

data collection and analysis
, 75–78

findings
, 78–84

implications for culture
, 88–89

implications for student organizers
, 89–90

linking results to SM theories
, 85–89

participants by method, site, and participant type
, 76

scholarship
, 3

sites selected for analyses and selection criteria
, 76

SMT concepts to analyze student-led action
, 72–75

student-led action on campuses
, 71–72

How Movements (Sometimes) Matter (2021)
, 2

Identity Evropa (I.E.)
, 44, 56

Ideological salience
, 101

Ideology
, 100

Impression management
, 41–44

Individual/membership optics
, 57–62

Indivisible groups
, 184

Inductive thematic analysis
, 77

Informative scholarship
, 128

Institutional politics
, 181

Interviews
, 107

Joint Committee on Rules and Regulations (J.C.R.A.R)
, 170

Labor unions
, 159–160

LGBTQ activists
, 183

Managerial occupation employment (MOE)
, 136

March on Washington
, 28, 1963

Mass media
, 98–99

Matrix-coding queries
, 77

MaxQDA software
, 46

Memphis sanitation workers’ strike
, 31, 1968

Mental models
, 103

Messy repression
, 158–159

Militancy
, 17

Militaristic language
, 14–15

Military theory
, 2–3

Militia groups
, 43

Mobilization/mobilize
, 102

Mobilizing tactics
, 182

Monroe campaign
, 27

Montreal Storm
, 44

Moral economy
, 129

Moral poles
, 101

Morality in tactical disputes
, 100–103

Mount Allison University (MtA)
, 75

Movements
, 126–128

American civil rights movement
, 131–133

capital
, 17

civil rights movement and change in racial inequality
, 139–147

context, and outcomes
, 126–128

data, methodology, and analytical approach
, 134–139

mail
, 17

social movements and outcomes
, 128–131

spatial extension
, 14–19

Naïve theory
, 103

Narratives
, 105

Nashville base case
, 19–23

Nashville cadre
, 17

Nashville Christian Leadership Council (NCLC)
, 19–20

Nashville civil rights movement
, 12, 20

base mission, traveling cadre, and movement spatial extension
, 14–19

data and method
, 19

extending movement mission
, 23–32

implications
, 32–33

traveling agents in social movement literature
, 13–14

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
, 4, 14–15, 131–132

Nationalist Socialist Legion (NSL)
, 44

Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques
, 46

Nazi imagery
, 48–49

Neckbeards
, 57–58

Net-Nazis
, 56–58

Networks

among students
, 81, 84, 87–88

with faculty
, 80–81, 87

Nonviolent army
, 18

Nonviolent direct action
, 14–15

Normalizing identity
, 52

Northern Student Movement (NSM)
, 24–25

Nunavut Arctic College (NAC)
, 75

Oath Keepers
, 43, 58–59

Online actions
, 61

Online data
, 45–46

Oppositional consciousness
, 13–14

Optics
, 40–41, 44

Organizational optics
, 47–51

Organizations
, 180

Outcomes
, 4–5, 126, 128, 186

Overt racism
, 52

Participant observation
, 163

Patriot Front
, 44, 47, 49

Patriot Prayer
, 58–59

Physical fitness
, 58

Police/policing
, 161

Polish LBGTQ movement
, 42

Political elites
, 85

Political opportunities
, 73–74

implications for
, 85–86

Political tactics
, 180

Poor Peoples’ Campaign
, 31

Porto Alegre Melhor
, 110

Post-Heyday
, 30, 32, 1966, 1968

Postering
, 52

Pragmatic abolitionists
, 99

Pragmatic abolitionists
, 111

Project C
, 28

Protest

importance of
, 190–192

tactics/activities
, 181

Protestant Reformation
, 13

Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA)
, 186–189

Racial inequality
, 130

change in
, 139–147

Racial justice
, 128

Rational/rationality
, 104

Reform movements
, 126

Religious agents
, 13

Religious organizations
, 159–160

Repression
, 4–5, 131, 158

in social movement studies
, 159–161

Resistance
, 184

Resource mobilization (RM)
, 99

Resources
, 131

Respectability politics
, 42

Right-wing movements
, 41

Scale shift
, 18–19

Secondary data/sources
, 2–3

Security
, 45–46

Selma campaign
, 29, 1965

Shell Oil icebreaker ship
, 1

Snow, David
, 100

Social brokers
, 87

Social capital
, 73–74

implications for
, 85–86

Social change
, 102

Social construction of reality
, 104

Social media
, 160

Social movement organizations (SMOs)
, 40–41, 129, 179–180

Social movement theory (SMT)
, 72

concepts to analyze student-led action
, 72–75

Social movements (SMs)
, 2, 70

backstage
, 49

cultural impacts
, 74–75

diffusion
, 17–18

expansion
, 15

implications for SM networks
, 86–88

linking results to SM theories
, 85–89

longevity
, 182

networks
, 74

outcomes
, 128–131

public image
, 41–44

scholarship
, 17, 127

studies
, 106

traveling agents in social movement literature
, 13–14

Social transformation
, 99

Sociological theory
, 12

Soldiers
, 23–24

Solidarity Sing-Along
, 159

arrests
, 165–168

defendants
, 171–172

judicial ineptitude
, 172

methods
, 162–163

police
, 168–170

prosecutors
, 170–171

repression in social movement studies
, 159–161

results
, 163–172

scene
, 163–164

songs
, 164–165

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
, 4, 19–20, 131–132

Southern Student Organizing Committee (SSOC)
, 24–25

State repression
, 160

Stigma/stigmatization
, 42

Stormfront
, 43

Strategy/strategic
, 1–2, 4, 180

incapacitation
, 161

poles
, 101

scholarly insights on
, 5–6

in tactical disputes
, 100–103

Student activism/student social movements
, 70–71

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)

Founding Conference
, 24

national leadership
, 24–25

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
, 4, 17, 131–132

Student organizers, implications for
, 89–90

Student-led action

on campuses
, 71–72

SMT concepts to analyze
, 72–75

Students for Democratic Society (SDS)
, 24–25

Success/successful outcomes
, 111–112

Supporters
, 23–24

Surveillance
, 138

Sustainability (subcategory in higher education)
, 70

Sustainability and Education Policy Network (SEPN)
, 70–71, 75

Sustainability initiative (SI)
, 75

Swedish Social Democratic Party
, 13

Tactical choices
, 180–182

Tactical disputes
, 108–110

strategy and morality in
, 100–103

Tactical diversity, importance of
, 188–190

Tactical innovation
, 183

Tactics
, 1, 3–4, 180–181

data and methods
, 184–187

diversity or specialization
, 182–183

findings
, 187–188

flexibility
, 183

scholarly insights on
, 5–6

varying importance of flexibility
, 192–196

Tastes in tactics
, 101

Tea Party
, 43

Thangyat
, 160–161

Theoretical gymnasium
, 73

Traditionalist Workers Party (TWP)
, 44

Travelers
, 13

Traveling agents in social movement literature
, 13–14

Traveling agitators
, 13

Traveling cadre
, 14–19

Traveling movement cadre
, 15

United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
, 70

United Nations’ Global Ocean Treaty
, 1

United States
, 15–16

civil rights campaigns
, 2–3

civil rights movement
, 18–19

Universit´e Laval (UL)
, 75

University College of the North (UCN)
, 75

University of British Columbia (UBC)
, 75

University of Toronto (U of T)
, 75

Vanguard America
, 44

Villains
, 60–61

Violent tactics
, 41

Voter registration
, 194

Voting Rights Act
, 134–135

Walker administration
, 165

War Without Violence
, 14–15

White Citizens Councils (WCCs)
, 138

White Nationalism 1.0
, 43, 46–47

White nationalism 2.0
, 46–47

White supremacist organizations
, 40

activism optics
, 51–57

data and methods
, 44–46

individual/membership optics
, 57–62

organizational optics
, 47–51

results
, 46–47

social movement public image, impression management, and optics
, 41–44

Wisconsin
, 4–5

Wisconsin Department of Justice
, 170

Wisconsin Uprising of 2011
, 159

Women and Gender Studies program
, 82

Worthiness, unity, numbers, and commitment (WUNC)
, 41

Youth
, 89