
Deconstructing the Role of Generations in Social Movements
Description
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With its high-quality chapters and transnational scope, this book will capture several key trends in the role of generations in social movements and explores topics including contemporary feminism, family, and intergenerational transmission, generationality and political change, rituals and social change, and Black politics and US democracy.
This is an invaluable resource for students and academics with an interest in sociology, political science, and the study of social movements and social change, and for policymakers and readers with a general interest in intergenerational conflict and the challenges of engaging new youth generations in political and democratic structures and processes.
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Persons
Jan Andre Lee Ludvigsen is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations and Politics with Sociology at Liverpool John Moores University, UK. Jan's research focuses on the sociology and politics of sport, particularly security, surveillance, supporter movements, and sport mega-events. He has authored several books, including Sport Mega-Events, Security and Covid-19 (Routledge, 2022) and edited several special issues. Moreover, his research has been published in globally leading journals including the British Journal of Sociology, Sociology Compass, Global Networks, Globalizations, Current Sociology, and Journal of Consumer Culture.
Maria Grasso is a Professor of Political Science and Political Sociology at Queen Mary University of London. Maria's research focuses on political sociology, social change, social and political inequalities, political generations, social movements, youth politics, gender gaps and the shift from traditional means of political participation to more diffuse and irregular forms of involvement. She is the author of Generations, Political Participation and Social Change in Western Europe (Routledge, 2016) and co-author of Street Citizens: Protest Politics and Social Movement Activism in the Age of Globalization (Cambridge University Press, 2019) and Living with Hard Times: Europeans in the Great Recession (ECPR Press, 2021). Her work has been published in various peer reviewed journals including British Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, European Political Science Review, International Political Science Review, Electoral Studies, Journal of Elections, Public Opinion, and Parties, Journal of European Public Policy, Political Studies, etc
Content
Acknowledgements
List of contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction: Deconstructing the role of generations in social movements
Mark Turner, Jan Andre Lee Ludvigsen and Maria Grasso
Chapter 2: Generations, Crises, Inequalities and Solidarities
Katherine Smith and Maria Grasso
Chapter 3: Legacies, Generations and Cycles in the Contemporary Feminist Movement in Italy
Anastasia Barone and Giada Bonu Rosenkranz
Chapter 4: "Talkn' bout my generation": Generational learning in the Chilean and Argentinean student movements at the dawn of the 21st century
Gabriela Gonzalez Vaillant
Chapter 5: Conflict, Succession, or Mutual Influences? Japanese Social Movements in 2010s and Preceding Generations
Takashi Horie
Chapter 6: Post-Movement Generations: Black Politics Protecting Democracy After the Movement for Black Lives
Marcus Board Jr.
Chapter 7: The legacy of the 15M movement: a new generation of activists
Heloise Nez
Chapter 8: Generational political engagement in soccer-based social movements
Mark Turner and Jan Andre Lee Ludvigsen
Index
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