ID | 124606 |
Title Proper | Social movement theory and the onset of the popular uprising in Syria |
Language | ENG |
Author | Leenders, Reinoud |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article takes stock of my attempt to scrutinize the onset of the Syrian uprising with the help of some key analytical concepts derived from social movement theory, including "opportunity" and "threat," "social networks," "repertoires of contention," "framing," and "diffusion." These tools allow me to identify and disentangle the mechanisms of early mobilization and the uprising and explain why they commenced in relatively peripheral areas. Social networks and framing processes are argued to have been key in mobilization, by transmitting opportunities derived from the "Arab Spring," by mediating the nexus between repression and mobilization, by creating and feeding a rich new repertoire of defiant protest acts and claims-making, and by aiding the diffusion or agglomeration of mobilization throughout the country. |
`In' analytical Note | Arab Studies Quarterly Vol. 35, No.3; Summer 2013: p.273-289 |
Journal Source | Arab Studies Quarterly Vol. 35, No.3; Summer 2013: p.273-289 |
Key Words | Social Movement Theory ; Social Network ; Social Mobilization ; Arab Spring |