Political Process and Popular Protest: The Mobilization against Free Trade in Canada

The mobilization to defeat the United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement is used as a point of departure for reflections on the role political processes play in social movement mobilization. Previous articles in this Journal presented a resource mobilization-political opportunities paradigm in the s...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of economics and sociology 1996-10, Vol.55 (4), p.473-488
1. Verfasser: Ayres, Jeffrey M.
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container_title The American journal of economics and sociology
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creator Ayres, Jeffrey M.
description The mobilization to defeat the United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement is used as a point of departure for reflections on the role political processes play in social movement mobilization. Previous articles in this Journal presented a resource mobilization-political opportunities paradigm in the study of social movements. This article expands this paradigm's analytic reach to a country that has contributed little research to the ongoing debate about social movement mobilization. Adopting a political process perspective, political institutions, political opportunities, and social and political organizations shaped the emergence and mobilization of the popular campaign. This case can strengthen a generalized understanding of those political factors most conducive to the interesting interplay and outcome of movement, party, and electoral politics.
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ispartof The American journal of economics and sociology, 1996-10, Vol.55 (4), p.473-488
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Activism
Canada
Collective action
Demonstrations & protests
Economic integration
Economic resources
Free Trade
Interest groups
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
International relations-US
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Liberal parties
Liberalism
Mobilization
North American Free Trade Agreement
POLITICAL AND POWER PROCESS
Political behavior
Political campaigns
Political institutions
Political integration
Political mobilization
Political Movements
Political organizations
Political parties
Political processes
Political protest
Political protests
Political science
Political sociology
Political systems
Politics
Protest
Resource Mobilization
Social activism
Social change
Social Movements
Social movements. Revolutions
Social research
Sociology
Studies
Trade agreements
Treaties
U.S.A
UNITED STATES, 1945 TO PRESENT
title Political Process and Popular Protest: The Mobilization against Free Trade in Canada
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