4 research outputs found

    Contentious Coalitions, Movement Divisions, and Strategic Action Fields. Factors Motivating and Unlikely Alliance of Environmental Organizations and Gas Companies.

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    My dissertation explores the factors motivating the formation of a contentious alliance of environmental movement organizations and major gas corporations. Utilizing Fligstein and McAdam’s (2012) theoretical framework of strategic action fields, I argue that a field-level analysis helps to contextualize the strategic decision-making environmental organizations engaged in as they surveyed broader societal and political conditions for deciding whether to support or oppose the coalition for advancing their goals. Additionally, I engage aspects of Whittier’s (2018) typology of frenemy relationship structures to link the interaction of environmental actors with the dynamics of contention that occurred within the field as a result of the collaboration. By situating organizational factors, such as resource mobilization and the framing processes of individual groups, in a wider network of potential alliance and conflict systems (Klandermans 1997) and proximate fields (Fligstein and McAdam 2012), my analysis shows that, as new collective action frames, identities, and practices emerged within the environmental field, uncertainty seeped into the shared understanding of the cultural processes and mission upon which the environmental field had been built. Additionally, my analysis also reveals that participating organizations valued the coalition as an important addition to their tactical repertoire and a necessary strategy to advance the movement’s goals in a politically constrained environment and globalizing world. Through this project, I seek to contribute to the emerging body of work focused on the intersection of social movement, organizational theory and field level analyses. My research also contributes to the literature on social movement coalitions. Despite the scholarly attention to the formation of coalitions among social movement organizations (Van Dyke and McCammon 2010), little work examines factors that influence organizations to pursue extra-movement, and in some cases, contentious, alliances (Whittier 2018). Finally, my study corroborates key aspects of Whittier’s (2018) frenemy typology. Understanding the coalition as an adversarial collaborative relationship among ideologically opposed actors helps to contextualize the alliance structure as a phenomenon distinct from social movement coalitions

    ON THE EVE OF A FOOD RIOT: AN INVESTIGATION OF THE POLITICAL DETERMINANTS OF WIDESPREAD PROTEST IN CENTRAL AMERICA DURING THE 2007-08 GLOBAL FOOD PRICE CRISIS

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    In this thesis, I develop a framework for the systematic investigation of the political determinants of widespread protest that occurred during the 2007-08 global food price crisis. Broadly engaging Acemoglu and Robinson’s (2001, 2006) theory of the democratic window of opportunity for mobilization engendered by transitory economic crises, I consider the role that both individual and structural factors play in promoting collective action for political change during such events. Fifteen hypotheses are offered that are grounded in theory on food riots, political culture, and political opportunity structures. Ultimately, this thesis takes the form of a proposal for future research on the impact of citizen political views and changing political opportunity structures in facilitating widespread social unrest during transitory economic shocks

    Women under Attack: Violence and Poverty in Guatemala

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    In 2009 Guatemalan women experienced the highest level of violence in Latin America and one of the highest in the world, and death rates have continued to increase in 2010. At the core of the issue are two major problems: pervasive poverty and legal exclusion. In turn, these two issues are closely connected since legal/judicial exclusion is a consequence of poverty. This paper aims to analyze the question of violence against women in Guatemala, to discuss women’s limited political, legal and economic rights, as well as the policies pursued since the end of Guatemala’s civil war to deal with the violence. The fact that crimes against women have not declined, but in fact are on the rise points to the ineffective nature of the existing polices, and the need to make a larger investment in antipoverty and other socioeconomic policies geared to increase women’s economic self-sufficiency
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