2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.2040-0209.2009.00332_2.x
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Hybrid Activism: Paths of Globalisation in the Brazilian Environmental Movement

Abstract: Summary Focusing on two case studies of environmental activism in Brazil, this paper argues against theories that consider local and global activism as two separate realms. Instead, it is argued here that transnational activists circulate across the two spaces. In the global spaces, they build alliances with foreign groups, and in the local ones, they deal with the national state, other organised groups and ordinary communities living inside environmental areas they aim to protect. Activists live in both spher… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Reliable and accurate data make a movement more powerful by supporting main arguments. Information production and dissemination can be more influential than mass demonstration (Alonso, 2009). For this, information should be collected, analysed, transformed into appropriate forms and disseminated widely (Jordan & Tuijl 2000).…”
Section: Role 3-linking To Global Network and Creating The Informatimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reliable and accurate data make a movement more powerful by supporting main arguments. Information production and dissemination can be more influential than mass demonstration (Alonso, 2009). For this, information should be collected, analysed, transformed into appropriate forms and disseminated widely (Jordan & Tuijl 2000).…”
Section: Role 3-linking To Global Network and Creating The Informatimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They are joined, moreover, by business actors in search of greater transparency and more responsiveness to social needs (Peña and Davis 2014). In other words, interactions among diverse actors in the global arena are leading to the emergence of hybrid actor networks and forms of activity that operate at different or multiple scales and seek to address critical weaknesses in the inter-state order (Alonso 2010). As Peña and Davis (2014: 275) conclude, 'social roles, interests and ideologies do not reflect the competitive social relations presumed by liberal pluralism.'…”
Section: Strategies Discourses Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to bridge across the local-global conceptual divides, we move beyond both vertical and horizontal conceptions of transnational mobilization and adopt a rooted transnationalism approach, under which we subsume scholarly work that has questioned the binary allocation of social movement actors, their goals, strategies, and identities to either the local or the global (Alonso, 2009;Djeclic & Quack, 2010;Tarrow, 2005). This literature has shown that actors and organizations can have multiple affiliations, being embedded in organizations, networks and experiences that span across borders.…”
Section: Transnational Activism: From Global and Local Positions To Tmentioning
confidence: 99%