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New Social Movements

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New Social Movements. ... Politics is therefore becoming less concerned with issues surrounding class and more ... Mass media is seen as an important agent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Social Movements


1
New Social Movements
  • www.educationforum.co.uk

2
What is a New Social Movement
  • Share many similarities with outsider pressure
    groups, and may be movements made up of
    pressure groups, BUT
  • Tend to be concerned with non economic non
    material issues morality feminism, peace,
    poverty, equality, environment.
  • Tend to be international or global in their
    outlook
  • Less structure and formally organised than
    pressure groups no leaders or hierarchies or
    memberships

3
Classifying NSMs
  • Simon Hallsworth identifies 2 types of NSM based
    the types of issue they promote
  • 1. NSMs which are focussed on defending aspects
    of the natural and social environment e.g.
    environmentalism, the peace movement, animal
    rights
  • 2. NSMs which are focussed on gaining equal
    rights for minority and marginalised groups
    feminism, civil rights, gay rights, disability
    rights

4
Organisation
  • NSMs tend to be informal and fragmented compared
    to OSMs
  • NSMs are movements often made up of groups of
    well established pressure groups
    environmentalism is made up of Greenpeace,
    Friends of the Earth etc.
  • NSMs tend to be wary and suspicious of elected
    politicians and civil servants rather than
    directly seeking their support
  • NSMs tend not to have formal structures or
    memberships supporters form informal networks
    often joined together by internet technology
    e.g. anti capitalist demonstrations 1999 in over
    80 countries simultaneously organised via
    internet
  • The pressure groups which can make up NSMs can
    often act very like traditional pressure groups
    but are also far more likely to engage in direct
    action
  • NSMs aim to change CULTURE (the values of
    everyone) not just the decisions of government

5
How have NSMs been Explained
  • Giddens claims NSMs are a response to
    globalisation globalisation has resulted in
    risks/issues which transcend national boundaries
    many of which are caused by the decisions of the
    rich and powerful pollution, rising oceans, oil
    spills, nuclear accidents
  • Faced with these global risks Gidens claims
    people have lost faith with national governments
    and turned to NSMs as the most effective form of
    political participation
  • Note membership of environmental groups is FAR
    greater than membership of political parties in
    the UK today

6
Postmodernity
  • Pakulski and Waters claim that the rise of NSMs
    is a sign of a postmodern society
  • They claim that in such a society a process of
    class decomposition is occurring class is
    becoming less and less important
  • Politics is therefore becoming less concerned
    with issues surrounding class and more concerned
    with issues around lifestyle and identity. NSMs
    reflect these fundamental changes
  • Mass media is seen as an important agent of
    postmodernisation media treats issues on a
    global scale not a national scale and people
    become more global in their outlook

7
Post Industrial Society
  • Post modernists such as Crook suggest that
    Britain has become a post industrial society
  • People no longer work in manufacturing (primary
    and secondary industry), instead they work in
    leisure, education and services (the tertiary
    sectors)
  • Because of this values have changed form
    materialist values (class, money, advancement) to
    post-materialist values (self expression,
    freedom, identity, lifestyle)
  • Post materialist values are reflected in NSMs
    gay rights, disability rights

8
Marxist Interpretation
  • Marxists reject the idea of post modern and post
    industrial society
  • NSMs instead are seen as a global and conscious
    response to the global nature of capitalism
  • Alex Callinicos suggests that the only NSMs of
    any lasting significance will be the anti global
    capitalist movement which draws protestor to an
    understanding of the true cause of world
    problems i.e. capitalism, and raises
    consciousness about the world wide exploitation
    of the working class

9
How significant are NSMs?
  • Giddens claims that NSMs have revitalised
    politics at a time when OSMs are in decline
  • Rise of NSMs seen as evidence against political
    apathy
  • Global nature of NSMs has changed the nature of
    political protest some engage in netwars
    using the internet to attack the powerful some
    concern at the revolutionary and radical nature
    of such campaigns a threat to nation states?
  • NSMs might be becoming important players on the
    global political stage

10
Questioning the Significance of NSMs
  • Paul Hirst suggests that the influence of NSMs is
    still quite limited
  • OSMs parties, pressure groups, trade unions day
    to day still wield the most power
  • NSMs only achieve influence on single issue level
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