21 Facts About Social movements

1.

Social movements movement is a loosely organized effort by a large group of people to achieve a particular goal, typically a social or political one.

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2.

Some scholars have argued that modern Western social movements became possible through education and increased mobility of labor due to the industrialization and urbanization of 19th-century societies.

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3.

Social movements have been and continue to be closely connected with democratic political systems.

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4.

Occasionally, social movements have been involved in democratizing nations, but more often they have flourished after democratization.

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5.

For Tilly, social movements are a major vehicle for ordinary people's participation in public politics.

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6.

Social movements argues that there are three major elements to a social movement:.

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7.

Early growth of social movements was connected to broad economic and political changes in England in the mid-18th century, including political representation, market capitalization, and proletarianization.

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8.

The term "social movements" was introduced in 1848 by the German Sociologist Lorenz von Stein in his book Socialist and Communist Movements since the Third French Revolution in which he introduced the term "social movement" into scholarly discussions – actually depicting in this way political movements fighting for the social rights understood as welfare rights.

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9.

Similarly, the process of industrialization which gathered large masses of workers in the same region explains why many of those early social movements addressed matters such as economic wellbeing, important to the worker class.

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10.

Many other social movements were created at universities, where the process of mass education brought many people together.

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11.

Nascent social movements often fail to achieve their objectives because they fail to mobilize sufficient numbers of people.

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12.

Social movements argues for creating movements that people actually want to join.

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13.

Tina Rosenberg, in Join the Club, How Peer Pressure can Transform the World, shows how Social movements grow when there is a core of enthusiastic players who encourage others to join them.

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14.

Difficulty for scholarship of Social movements is that for most, neither insiders to a movement nor outsiders apply consistent labels or even descriptive phrases.

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15.

Social movements have a life cycle: they are created, they grow, they achieve successes or failures and eventually, they dissolve and cease to exist.

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16.

Social movements occur in liberal and authoritarian societies but in different forms.

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17.

Deprivation theory argues that social movements have their foundations among people who feel deprived of some good or resource.

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18.

Mass society theory argues that social movements are made up of individuals in large societies who feel insignificant or socially detached.

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19.

Social movements, according to this theory, provide a sense of empowerment and belonging that the movement members would otherwise not have.

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20.

The theory argues that social movements develop when individuals with grievances are able to mobilize sufficient resources to take action.

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21.

The traditional view of movements often perceived them as chaotic and disorganized, treating activism as a threat to the social order.

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