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DEMOCRACY MOVEMENT (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   053970


China since 1949 / Benson, Linda 2002  Book
Benson, Linda Book
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication London, Longman, 2002.
Description xviii, 152p.pbk
Series Seminar Studies in History
Standard Number 0582357225
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
046293951.05/BEN 046293MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   191553


Four crises: test of diplomacy / Iyer, G S 2023  Book
Iyer, G S Book
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Publication New Delhi, Heritage Publishers, 2023.
Description xiii, 311p.hbk
Standard Number 9788170265382
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
060413327.2/IYE 060413MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   147845


Growth of “localism” in Hong Kong : a new path for the democracy movement? / Kwong, Ying-ho   Journal Article
Kwong, Ying-ho Journal Article
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Key Words Hong Kong  Localism  Democracy Movement 
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4
ID:   044814


Voices from Tiananman square : Beijing spring and the democracy movement / Yu, Mok Chiu (ed.); Harrison, J Frank (ed.) 1990  Book
Yu, Mok Chiu Book
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Publication Montreal, Black Rose Books, 1990.
Description xxiv, 203p.pbk
Standard Number 0921689586
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
032670951.058/YU 032670MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   119479


What best explains successful protest Cascades? ICTs and the fu / Hussain, Muzammil M; Howard, Philip N   Journal Article
Hussain, Muzammil M Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract It has been 15 years since the last wave of democratization. But as a region, North Africa and the Middle East were noticeably devoid of popular democracy movements-until the early months of 2011. Democratization movements had existed long before technologies like mobile phones and the Internet came to these countries. But with these technologies, people sharing an interest in democracy built extensive networks and activated collective action movements for political change. What might have made regimes more susceptible than others to these uprisings, and what might explain the relative successes of some movements over others? What role does information technology have in the modern recipe for democratization? Weighing multiple political, economic, demographic, and cultural conditions, we find that information infrastructure-especially mobile phone use-consistently appears as one of the key ingredients in parsimonious models for the conjoined combinations of causes behind regime fragility and social movement success. To understand the successes and failures of contemporary political protests, we must also assess how civil society leaders and authoritarian security forces treat communication technologies as democratically consequential.
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