A Retrospective on the Civil Rights Movement: Political and Intellectual Landmarks

This review provides an analysis of the political and intellectual contributions made by the modern civil rights movement. It argues that the civil rights movement was able to overthrow the Southern Jim Crow regime because of its successful use of mass nonviolent direct action. Because of its effect...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of sociology 1999-01, Vol.25 (1), p.517-539
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description This review provides an analysis of the political and intellectual contributions made by the modern civil rights movement. It argues that the civil rights movement was able to overthrow the Southern Jim Crow regime because of its successful use of mass nonviolent direct action. Because of its effectiveness and visibility, it served as a model that has been utilized by other movements both domestically and internationally. Prior to the civil rights movement social movement scholars formulated collective behavior and related theories to explain social movement phenomena. These theories argued that movements were spontaneous, non-rational, and unstructured. Resource mobilization and political process theories reconceptualized movements stressing their organized, rational, institutional and political features. The civil rights movement played a key role in generating this paradigmatic shift because of its rich empirical base that led scholars to rethink social movement phenomena.
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subjects 20th century
Activism
African American culture
African Americans
Black communities
Black people
Civil rights
Civil Rights Movements
Collective action
Decades
Inequality
Murders & murder attempts
Nonviolence
Oppression
Organizational Effectiveness
Paradigms
Political aspects
Political Movements
Political protests
Political sociology
Politics
Population
Race
Race relations
Resource Mobilization
Segregation
Social activism
Social aspects
Social economics
Social Movements
Social movements. Revolutions
Social protests
Social Theories
Society
Sociology
United States
United States of America
White people
White supremacy
Womens rights movements
title A Retrospective on the Civil Rights Movement: Political and Intellectual Landmarks
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