Social Movements and Networks: Relational Approaches to Collective Action
Mario Diani and Doug McAdam
Abstract
Illustrates relational approaches to the study of social movements and collective action. Contributors analyse most recent developments in the analysis of the role of networks as facilitators or constraints of individual recruitment, various forms of interorganizational networks, and the relationship between social networks and the political context in which social movements operate. They also relate the growing attention to social networks by social movement analysis to broader theoretical debates. Both quantitative and qualitative network analysis are considered, and attention is paid to the ... More
Illustrates relational approaches to the study of social movements and collective action. Contributors analyse most recent developments in the analysis of the role of networks as facilitators or constraints of individual recruitment, various forms of interorganizational networks, and the relationship between social networks and the political context in which social movements operate. They also relate the growing attention to social networks by social movement analysis to broader theoretical debates. Both quantitative and qualitative network analysis are considered, and attention is paid to the time dimension and the evolution of networks, through both simulation models and empirical data. Empirical chapters cover both contemporary and historical episodes of collective action, in reference to authoritarian as well as progressive, left‐libertarian movements. Chapters focusing on individual networks specify different effects of network embeddedness over participation in different types of collective action (Passy, Anheier). Interorganizational relations are explored by looking at leadership dynamics (Diani), the relationship between categorical traits and network position within coalitions (Ansell), and the role of individuals in linking different organizations both synchronically and diachronically (Osa). Network approaches to the political process illustrate shifts in alliance and conflict networks at a time of regime change (Tilly and Wood), the evolution of social networks during protest cycles (Oliver and Myers), and the role of local elites in shaping protest networks in the community (Broadbent). Theoretical chapters discuss network perspectives on social movements in relation to recent theoretical developments in rational choice theory (Gould), cultural analysis (Mische), and the analysis of social mechanisms (McAdam). A radical case is also made for a reorientation of the whole social movement agenda along network lines (Diani).
Keywords:
collective action,
cultural analysis,
network analysis,
participation,
political process,
rational choice,
simulation models,
social mechanisms,
social movements,
social networks
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2003 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199251780 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 |
DOI:10.1093/0199251789.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Mario Diani, Editor
Professor of Sociology at the University of Trento, Italy
Author Webpage
Doug McAdam, Editor
Professor of Sociology at Stanford University, and Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
Author Webpage
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