What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America

<p>Whether social movements can make a difference remains a perennial question of social movement scholarship. This thesis aims to make a contribution to this debate by examining the contentious collective action of indigenous people(s) in Latin America. This has the potential to enrich both t...

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Main Author: Krausova, A
Other Authors: Payne, L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
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author Krausova, A
author2 Payne, L
author_facet Payne, L
Krausova, A
author_sort Krausova, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>Whether social movements can make a difference remains a perennial question of social movement scholarship. This thesis aims to make a contribution to this debate by examining the contentious collective action of indigenous people(s) in Latin America. This has the potential to enrich both the Latin American scholarship on indigenous politics, which often takes the impact of indigenous movements for granted, and the social movement scholarship on outcomes, which seems to increasingly question whether protest can have any direct impact at all. This thesis suggests that neither approach is adequate and that factors under the control of indigenous movements themselves can lead to positive outcomes. The choice of tactics, the nature of claims and the way in which they are framed, play a role, both directly and in interaction with contextual variables. Taking into account movements’ strategic claiming and framing is thus crucial for understanding social movement outcomes. Few studies have been able to show the effect of framing on movement outcomes; partially at least this is because the claiming (what) and framing (how) of social movements have not been distinguished well within framing theories. To have an impact, movements need to be able to impose material and symbolic costs on their targets that exceed the cost that meeting their demand would present. This can be done through creating enough materially costly disruption—such as by using roadblocks or sustaining mobilisation—and imposing enough symbolic costs—such as making claims framed in a way that resonates with the agendas and discourses of their targets, as well as the public. Overall, this work thus suggests that despite the empirical support for the thesis that social movements tend to rely on political opportunities for securing desired outcomes, this is not inconsistent with the fact that social movements can succeed even in unfavourable political conditions. In the latter situation, if protest can impose a high enough combination of both material and symbolic costs, it can indeed matter.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:ac38ea57-ba1b-4441-a968-d534eb1e4b052024-02-12T10:53:15ZWhat social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin AmericaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:ac38ea57-ba1b-4441-a968-d534eb1e4b05Social movements & ProtestSociologyLatin AmericaEnglishORA Deposit2018Krausova, APayne, LBiggs, M<p>Whether social movements can make a difference remains a perennial question of social movement scholarship. This thesis aims to make a contribution to this debate by examining the contentious collective action of indigenous people(s) in Latin America. This has the potential to enrich both the Latin American scholarship on indigenous politics, which often takes the impact of indigenous movements for granted, and the social movement scholarship on outcomes, which seems to increasingly question whether protest can have any direct impact at all. This thesis suggests that neither approach is adequate and that factors under the control of indigenous movements themselves can lead to positive outcomes. The choice of tactics, the nature of claims and the way in which they are framed, play a role, both directly and in interaction with contextual variables. Taking into account movements’ strategic claiming and framing is thus crucial for understanding social movement outcomes. Few studies have been able to show the effect of framing on movement outcomes; partially at least this is because the claiming (what) and framing (how) of social movements have not been distinguished well within framing theories. To have an impact, movements need to be able to impose material and symbolic costs on their targets that exceed the cost that meeting their demand would present. This can be done through creating enough materially costly disruption—such as by using roadblocks or sustaining mobilisation—and imposing enough symbolic costs—such as making claims framed in a way that resonates with the agendas and discourses of their targets, as well as the public. Overall, this work thus suggests that despite the empirical support for the thesis that social movements tend to rely on political opportunities for securing desired outcomes, this is not inconsistent with the fact that social movements can succeed even in unfavourable political conditions. In the latter situation, if protest can impose a high enough combination of both material and symbolic costs, it can indeed matter.</p>
spellingShingle Social movements & Protest
Sociology
Latin America
Krausova, A
What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title_full What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title_fullStr What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title_short What social movements ask for, and how they ask for it: Strategic claiming and framing, and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in Latin America
title_sort what social movements ask for and how they ask for it strategic claiming and framing and the successes and failures of indigenous movements in latin america
topic Social movements & Protest
Sociology
Latin America
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