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Social Change, Resistance and Social Practices

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From post-Katrina struggles to Muslim women refusing to unveil, the logic of a new generation of protest is emerging
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  • 20 March 2012
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Critical sociologists of various nationalities focus on cutting-edge approaches to conflict-driven social change. By emphasizing the role played by contemporary social movements such as environmentalists, migrant organizations, world social forum activists, and others, these studies grapple with diverse forms of organized resistance in the twenty-first century.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 268
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Studies in Critical Social Sciences
Publication Date: 20 March 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.02 in
ISBN: 9781608461448
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Poverty & Homelessness, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, Poverty and precarity, Housing and homelessness, Social discrimination and social justice, Ethnic groups and multicultural studies

Richard Ricardo” A. Dello Buono, Ph.D. (Boston College, 1986) in Social Economy, is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology, Manhattan College. His research areas include comparative social problems and Latin American/Caribbean Studies. Recent works include Latin America after the Neoliberal Debacle, with Ximena de la Barra (Rowman and Littlefield, 2009), and Imperialism, Neoliberalism and Social Struggles in Latin America, with Jose Bell Lara (Brill, 2007).

David Fasenfest, PhD (University of Michigan, 1984) in Sociology, is Associate Professor of Sociology at Wayne State University, and Editor of the journal Critical Sociology. He has published widely on community development, income inequality and critical sociology. Most recently, he edited Engaging Social Justice: Critical Studies of 21st Century Social Transformation (Brill, 2009).

Notes on Contributors

1. Writing the Relationship of Resistance and Social Change, Richard A. Dello Buono

PART I. SOCIAL MOVEMENT FOR CHANGE
2. Environmentalism and the Family of Anti-Systemic Movements: Toward a Global Movement of Movements?,
Matthew Kaneshiro & Kirk Lawrence
3. New Orleans and the Dialectics of Post-Katrina Reconstruction, A. Kathryn Stout
4. The Social Forum Process and the Praxis of Race, Class, Gender and Sexualities, Rose Brewer
5. A Bunch of Criminals? Analyzing Political Armed Violence as a Social Production Process, Simon Sottsas

PART II. OPPOSITIONAL POLITICS IN MEXICO
6. Fifteen Years of NAFTA: The Impact on Rural Mexico, Irma Lorena Acosta Reveles
7. Power and resistance in post-NAFTA Mexico: Transformational and System-stabilizing NGOs, Krista
Brumley
8. As Neoliberal Crises Persist, Indigenous-led Movements Resist: Examining the current social and
political-economic conjuncture in Southern Mexico, Molly Talcott

PART III. MIGRATION AND SOCIAL CHANGE
9. The Production of the “Illegal Subject”, Nicole Trujillo-Pagan
10. Migration, Transnationalism and Post-Modernity, Alejandro I. Canales & Israel Montiel Armas
11. The Global Structuring of Gender, Race, and Class: Conceptual Sites of its Dynamics and Resistance in the Philippine Experience, Ligaya Lindio-McGovern
12. Dismantling the Defensive Wall of the Colonized: The Veil and the French Law on Secularity and Conspicuous Religious Symbols in Schools, Mohammad A. Chaichian