Chapter 21: Social Movements and Social Change
Motivational Farming
A call to action Example, In the gay marriage movement, a call to action might encourage you to vote "no" on Proposition 8 in California (a move to limit marriage to male-female couples), or conversely, to contact your local congressperson to express your viewpoint that marriage should be restricted to opposite-sex couples.
Valued-Added Theory
A functionalist perspective theory that posits that several preconditions must be in place for collective behavior to occur
Flash Mob
A large group of people who gather together in a spontaneous activity that lasts a limited amount of time
Mass
A relatively large group with a common interest, even if they may not be in close proximity Example, such as players of the popular Facebook game Farmville Remember that members of a mass share interests
Social Movement Organization
A single social movement group
Public
An unorganized, relatively diffuse group of people who share ideas Example, such as the Libertarian political party Members of a public share ideas.
Acting Crowds
Crowds of people who are focused on a specific action or goal Example, such as a protest movement or riot
Reform Movement
Movements that seek to change something specific about the social structure Examples, include anti-nuclear groups, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), and the Human Rights Campaign's advocacy for Marriage Equality
Alternative Movements
Social movements that limit themselves to self-improvement changes in individuals Examples, include trends like transcendental meditation or a macrobiotic diet.
Social Change
The change in a society created through social movements as well as through external factors like environmental shifts or technological innovations
Social Movement Industry
The collection of the social movement organizations that are striving toward similar goals
Modernization
The process that increases the amount of specialization and differentiation of structure in societies
Emergent Norm Theory
A perspective that emphasizes the importance of social norms in crowd behavior Example, think about human behavior during Hurricane Katrina
New Social Movement Theory
Theory that attempts to explain the proliferation of postindustrial and postmodern movements that are difficult to understand using traditional social movement theories
Resource Mobilization Theory
Theory that explains social movements' success in terms of their ability to acquire resources and mobilize individuals Example, PETA, a social movement organization, is in competition with Greenpeace and the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), two other social movement organizations
Fame Alignment Process
Using bridging, amplification, extension, and transformation as an ongoing and intentional means of recruiting participants to a movement
Expressive Crowds
Crowds who share opportunities to express emotions Example, funerals and weddings
Revolutionary Movement
Movements that seek to completely change every aspect of society Examples, include the 1960's counterculture movement, as well as anarchist collectives and Texas Secede
Religious/Redemptive Movements
Movements that work to promote inner change or spiritual growth in individuals Example, include Heaven's Gate or the Branch Davidians
Conventional Crowds
People who come together for a regularly scheduled event Example, religious service
Resistance Movements
Those who seek to prevent or undo change to the social structure Example, The Ku Klux Klan and pro-life movements fall into this category
Crowd
When a fairly large number of people share close proximity Examples include a group of people attending an Ani DiFranco concert, tailgating at a Patriots game, or attending a worship service
Prognostic Framing
When social movements state a clear solution and a means of implementation Examples of this frame, when looking at the issue of marriage equality as framed by the anti-gay marriage movement, include the plan to restrict marriage to "one man/one woman" or to allow only "civil unions" instead of marriage
Diagnostic Framing
When the social problem is stated in a clear, easily understood manner Example, The anti-gay marriage movement is an example of diagnostic framing with its uncompromising insistence that marriage is only between a man and a woman.
Collective Behavior
A non-institutionalized activity in which several people voluntarily engage Examples of collective behavior can include anything from a group of commuters traveling home from work to the trend toward adopting the Justin Bieber hair flip and flash mobs
Assembling Theory
A theory that credits individuals in crowds as behaving as rational thinkers and views crowds as engaging in purposeful behavior and collective action
Casual Crowds
People who share close proximity without really interacting Example, such as people standing in line at the post office
Social Movement
Purposeful, organized groups striving to work towards a common goal Example, Occupy Wall Street, PETA
Social Movement Sector
The multiple social movement industries in a society, even if they have widely varying constituents and goals