Synopses & Reviews
Globalization has spurred people to mobilize to protect their lands, cultural identities, and autonomy. Simultaneous communications advances have increased awareness of human rights violations and inequities in the global distribution of resources.
Social Movements: An Anthropological Reader expands on standard studies of social movements by offering a collection of writings that is exclusively
anthropological in nature and
global in its focus – thereby serving as an invaluable tool for instructors and students alike.
The chapters are based on fieldwork carried out on four continents – North America, South America, Africa, and Asia – and in fourteen countries. These chapters address: problems of global health and the spread of diseases; loss of control over basic resources such as water and fuel; militarization; and repression of indigenous peoples and of women. The authors offer solutions that have been formulated by local peoples themselves; these innovative responses provide a context for reform from below rather than directed by preconceived notions from above.
Synopsis
Social Movements: An Anthropological Reader expands on standard studies of social movements by offering a collection of writings that is exclusively anthropological in nature and global in its focus-thereby serving as an invaluable tool for instructors and students alike.
- Based on fieldwork carried out on four continents - North America, South America, Africa, and Asia - and in 14 countries
- Includes articles that address problems ranging from global health and the spread of diseases; loss of control over basic resources such as water and fuel; militarization; to the repression of indigenous peoples and of women
- Offers solutions formulated by local peoples
Synopsis
Social Movements: An Anthropological Reader expands on standard studies of social movements by offering a collection of writings that is exclusively anthropological in nature and global in its focus thereby serving as an invaluable tool for instructors and students alike.
About the Author
"Expands on standard studies of social movements by offering a collection of writings that is exclusively anthropological in nature and global in its focus - thereby serving as an invaluable tool for instructors and students alike."
Anthropologie
"I would highly recommend the book for development scholars." Development and Change
“Between global processes and local contexts, a great variety of social movements are at work. This careful and theoretically illuminating selection of case studies shows June Nash’s masterful grasp of a quickly growing field in anthropology.” Ulf Hannerz, Stockholm University
“An exciting volume! The contributors write from first-hand ethnographic knowledge of struggles in the anti-globalization movement, including the indigenous, peasants, women, industrial and urban workers, and even Islamic movements as they work to achieve a more equitable, democratic society.” Helen Safa, University of Florida
“With characteristic excellence and originality, June Nash traces a particular history in the making: how localized struggles worldwide are emerging globally in response to the devastations of economic corporate globalization.” Saskia Sassen, author of Globalization and its Discontents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments.
Notes on Contributors.
Introduction: Social Movements and Global Processes: June Nash (City University New York).
Part I: Fragmentation and the Recomposition of Civil Society.
2. When Networks Don’t Work: Marc Edelman (City University New York).
3. The State and the Right Wing: The Village Scout Movement in Thailand: Katherine A. Bowie (University of Wisconsin-Madison).
4. Gender, Citizenship, and the Politics of Identity: Lynn Stephen (University of Oregon).
5. Activism and Class Identity: The Saturn Auto Factory Case: Sharryn Kasmir (Hofstra University).
Part II: Secularization and Fundamentalist Reactions.
6. Print Islam: Media and Religious Revolution in Afghanistan: David B. Edwards (Williams College).
7. Local Islam Gone Global: The Roots of Religious Militancy in Egypt and its Transnational Transformation: James Toth (Northeastern University).
8. Nationalism and Militarism in West Papua: Institutional Power, Interpretive Practice, and the Pursuit of Christian Truth: Danilyn Rutherford (University of Chicago).
9. The Sarvodaya Movement’s Vision of Peace and a Dharmic Civil Society: George Bond (Northwestern University).
Part III: Deterritorialization and the Politics of Place.
10. Ethnic Resurgence: Autonomy Movements against Deterritorialization: June Nash (City University New York).
11. Resiliance of Nationalism in a Global Era: Megaprojects in Mexico’s South: Molly Doane (Marquette University).
12. The Politics of Place: Legislation, Civil Society and the ‘Restoration" of the Florida Everglades: Max Kirsch (Florida Atlantic University).
13. "Land, Water, and Truth": San Identity and Global Indigenism: Renée Sylvain (University of Guelph).
Part IV: Privatization, Individualization, and Global Cosmopolitanism.
14. The Fair Trade Movement: Changing the Rules of Trade with Global Partnership: Kimberly M. Grimes (University of Delaware).
15. "The Water is Ours, Carajo!": Deep Citizenship in Bolivia’s Water War: Robert Albro (Wheaton College).
16. From the Cosmopolitan to the Personal: Women’s Mobilization with Respect to HIV/AIDS: Ida Susser (City University of New York).
17. Political Organization among Indigenous Women of the Amazonia: Ligia Simonian (Federal University of Pará).
18. At Home in the World: Women’s Activism in Hyderabad, India: Deepa Reddy (University of Houston-Clear Lake).
Index