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The Politics of Social Protest was first published in 1995. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

Bringing together celebrated scholars from diverse traditions and backgrounds, The Politics of Social Protest focuses on the reciprocal relationships among social movements, states, and political parties. The volume is organized around three key questions: Why do citizens resort to the often risky and demanding strategy of using disruptive protest when other channels of political intervention appear to be available? What is the relationship between social protest movements and systems of political representation? And what is the impact of the structure and development of the state on social movements themselves?

Contributors include Ronald Aminzade, University of Minnesota; Paul Burstein, University of Washington; Russell J. Dalton, University of California, Irvine; Donatella della Porta, University of Florence; Henry Dietz, University of Texas, Austin; Rachel L. Einwohner, University of Washington; Steven E. Finkel, University of Virginia; Jerrold D. Green, University of Arizona; Jocelyn Hollander, University of Washington; Hanspeter Kriesi, University of Geneva; Diarmuid Maguire, University of Sydney; Bronislaw Misztal, Indiana University, Fort Wayne; Edward N. Muller, University of Arizona; Michael Nollert, University of Trier; Karl-Dieter Opp, University of Hamburg; Dieter Rucht, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin; Michael Wallace, Indiana University; and Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

J. Craig Jenkins is professor of sociology at The Ohio State University. He is the author of The Politics of Insurgency: The Farm Worker Movement of the 1960's (1985).

Bert Klandermans is professor of applied social psychology at Free University in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. He has published widely on social movements in journals such as the American Sociological Review, Sociological Forum, and the European Journal of Social Psychology. He is the editor of the Social Movements, Protest, and Contention series for the University of Minnesota Press.

Copublished with UCL Press, London.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, About the Series, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Part I. Introduction
  1. 1. The Politics of Social Protest
  2. J. Craig Jenkins, Bert Klandermans
  3. pp. 3-13
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  1. 2. Social Movements, Political Representation, and the State: An Agenda and Comparative Framework
  2. J. Craig Jenkins
  3. pp. 14-36
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  1. Part II. The Origins of Social Protest: Ideology, Regimes, and Oppositions
  1. 3. Between Movement and Party: The Transformation of Mid-Nineteenth-Century French Republicanism
  2. Ronald Aminzade
  3. pp. 39-62
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  1. 4. Left-Right Ideology and Collective Political Action: A Comparative Analysis of Germany, Israel, and Peru
  2. Karl-Dieter Opp, Steven E. Finkel, Edward N. Muller, Gadi Wolfsfeld, Henry A. Dietz, Jerrold D. Green
  3. pp. 63-95
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  1. 5. The New Class, Postindustrialism, and Neocorporatism: Three Images of Social Protest in the Western Democracies
  2. Michael Wallace, J. Craig Jenkins
  3. pp. 96-137
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  1. 6. Neocorporatism and Political Protest in the Western Democracies: A Cross-National Analysis
  2. Michael Nollert
  3. pp. 138-164
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  1. Part III. The Structure of Political Opportunities: Protest and Electoral Politics
  1. 7. The Political Opportunity Structure of New Social Movements: Its Impact on Their Mobilization
  2. Hanspeter Kriesi
  3. pp. 167-198
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  1. 8. Opposition Movements and Opposition Parties: Equal Partners or Dependent Relations in the Struggle for Power and Reform?
  2. Diarmuid Maguire
  3. pp. 199-228
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  1. 9. Left-Libertarian Movements in Context: A Comparison of Italy and West Germany, 1965–1990
  2. Donatella della Porta, Dieter Rucht
  3. pp. 229-272
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  1. Part IV. The State and Movement Outcomes: System Transformations and Political Reform
  1. 10. The Success of Political Movements: A Bargaining Perspective
  2. Paul Burstein, Rachel L. Einwohner, Jocelyn A. Hollande
  3. pp. 275-295
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  1. 11. Strategies of Partisan Influence: West European Environmental Groups
  2. Russell J. Dalton
  3. pp. 296-323
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  1. 12. Starting from Scratch Is Not Always the Same: The Politics of Protest and the Postcommunist Transitions in Poland and Hungary
  2. Bronislaw Misztal, J. Craig Jenkins
  3. pp. 324-340
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  1. Bibliography
  2. pp. 341-364
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 365-370
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  1. Author Index
  2. pp. 371-376
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  1. Subject Index
  2. pp. 377-381
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