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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In contemporary societies this desire for change is represented through 'New Social Movements', about which a considerable literature has emerged (e.g. Habermsis 1981, Jennett & Stewart 1989, Giri 1992. These movements 'aim to transform existing cultural pattems... have a loose and fiuid structure... issue a clarion call for broad change... and adopt a Utopian goal of a new millenium' (Jennett & Stewart 1989 p. 1).…”
Section: A Revised Critical Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contemporary societies this desire for change is represented through 'New Social Movements', about which a considerable literature has emerged (e.g. Habermsis 1981, Jennett & Stewart 1989, Giri 1992. These movements 'aim to transform existing cultural pattems... have a loose and fiuid structure... issue a clarion call for broad change... and adopt a Utopian goal of a new millenium' (Jennett & Stewart 1989 p. 1).…”
Section: A Revised Critical Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, when we look at contemporary social movements, even of the new social movement variety, we find in their work an intertwinement between identity formation and resource mobilisation. Thus, understanding the work of social movements in terms of the exclusionary or 'either or' logic of identity and resource is not helpful; we need to look at contemporary movements as embodying a dialectic of identity formation and resource mobilisation (Giri 1992;Rochon 1998).…”
Section: Identity Politics and New Social Movements: The Dialectic Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the western world community action groups addressing issues of feminism, the environment, peace, workers' rights, alternative lifestyles, indigenous cultures and service provision fall under the term the new social movements. In the Third World, new social movements often address religious and democratic issues while in the former Soviet bloc new social movements seek peace, and democratic and human rights (Giri, 1992).…”
Section: Sciences Macquarie University Nsw 2109mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second point of contention refers to the image that new social movements inhabit a noninstitutional sphere. New social movements in various ways project the private sphere or life world onto the public arena and by doing so have created a new non-institutional political space (Giri, 1992;Offe, 1985). In contrast, the institutional sphere contains the state, capital, organised labour and their related lobby groups (Economou, 1992).…”
Section: Sciences Macquarie University Nsw 2109mentioning
confidence: 99%
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