[movimenti.bicocca] Fwd: Vol 31--Research in Social Movement…

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Author: Tommaso Vitale
Date:  
To: ML movimenti Bicocca
Subject: [movimenti.bicocca] Fwd: Vol 31--Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change Published
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> We are happy to announce the publication of Volume 31 of Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change.
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> Please find the Table of Contents pasted below.
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> I think you will find it is another strong volume for the RSMCC series with three distinct sections. The first section includes research on the Palestinian/Israeli conflict and its intersections with the sociology of emotions and political process theory. The second section contains four papers linked by their treatment of tactical and strategic issues associated with gender-based and gay and lesbian social movements, organizations, and their campaigns. The three articles in Section Three treat themes associated with the complex intersection of identity formation and mobilization. As has long been the RSMCC series tradition, Volume 31 showcases top-level, original, and multi-method research on a variety of movements, organizations and conflicts in ways that contribute to theory-building.
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> Table of Contents—Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Volume 31
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> Introduction
> Patrick G. Coy
> Part I: Social Movements and the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
> Tova Benski, “Emotion Maps of Participation in Protest: The Case of Women in Black against the Occupation in Israel”
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> Eitan Alimi and Liora Norwich, “Learning from Failure: Why and How ‘Scale Shift’ Failed to Launch – Evidence from the Case of the Arab Israeli Land Day
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> Part II: Gender Issues & Gay Rights
> Alison Faubel, “The Pitfalls of Winning: A Comparison of Two First-Wave Feminist Organizations”
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> Dennis J. Downey, Sandrine Zerbib and Derek Christopher Martin, “Implicit Politics in a Free and Open Space: Belly Dance, Leisure Activity, and Gender Identity”
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> Amy Stone, “Dominant Tactics in Social Movement Tactical Repertoires: Gay Rights at the Ballot Box, 1974-2008”
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> Steven Boutcher, “Mobilizing in the Shadow of the Law: Lesbian and Gay Rights in the Aftermath of Bowers v. Hardwick”
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> Part III: Identity, Mobilization, and Press Coverage
> Matthew Eddy, “Freedom Summer Abroad: Biographical Pathways and Cosmopolitanism among International Human Rights Workers”
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> Christopher Gunderson, “The Making of Organic Indigenous-Campesino Intellectuals: Catechist Training in the Diocese of San Cristóbal and the Roots of the Zapatista Uprising”
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> Melissa F. Weiner, “All the News That’s Fit to Print? Silence and Voice in Mainstream and Ethnic Press Accounts Of African American Protest”
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> Link to abstracts for each article in V31 of RSMCC:
> http://www.emeraldinsight.com/books.htm?issn=0163-786x&volume=31
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> __________________________________________
> Patrick G. Coy
> US Fulbright Scholar--U of Botswana, 2010-2011
> Research Centre for San Studies &
> Dep't of Political and Administrative Studies
> Mobile Phone in Botswana: 71 206647
> ___________________________________________     

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