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Saturday 21 November 2015

INTRODUCTION: COMPONENTS AND STAGES OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS; CONCEPTUAL ISSUES IN THE STUDY OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

INTRODUCTION

A social movement is a form of collective behaviour in which a large number of people ,ir; united in an attempt to promote or resist social change. For most people, participation ia a social movement is only informal and indirect. Usually, a shared sense of dissatisfaction brings people together. They feel concerted action is necessary to change the situation perceived to be undesirable. But many of them who participate in various activities of the movement may not necessarily join the organization which sponsors it.

CONCEPT AND CHARACTERISTICS OF SOCIAL MOVEMENT:

Neil J. smelser:defines social movements” as an organised group effort to generate or to resist social change”
In the words of M.S.A RAO:social movement” as an organised attempt on the part of a section of society to bring about either partial or total change in society through collective mobilization based on ideology”

Sociologists have agreed upon the following as the characteristics of social movements:.

(1)Collective Effort:-social movements undoubtedly involves collective action.however,this collective action,takes the form of a movement only when it is sustained for a long time.This collection action need not be formally organised. It could be an informal attempt also.But it should be able to create an interest and awakening in relatively large number of people.
(2)oriented towards social change:-A social movement is generally oriented towards bringing about social changeThis change could either be partial or total.Though the movement is aimed at bringing about a change in the values norms,ideologies of the existing system,efforts also made by some other forces to resist the changes and to maintain the status quo.
(3)Ideology –According to M.S.A. Rao, An important component of social movement that distinguishes  it from general category of collective movilization,is the presence of an ideology.example:a student strike  involves collective movillzaition and is oriented towards change.But in the absence of an ideology .  Ideology refers to collectivised opinion expressed by movement protagonists  that justifies their collective action involving violence or nonviolence.
 (4)Leadership_it means representation of collectivity.It consists of organizing the opinion and resources within group.In the popular stage the movement begins to rally around a figire or a leader who promises to alleviate the sufferings of the people.This leader may be a charismatic leader .  Leadership may b
 (5)Goal:The goal is the objective of a movement.  It is an aim of the group.  It is the  collective demand for a desired result such as freedom, justice and so on.
 (6)organizational frame work-As paul Wilkinson has pointed out that a social movement requires a minimum of organizational framework to achieve success or alteast to maintain the tempo of the movement.To make the distinction clear between the leaders and followers,to make clear the purposes of the movement,to persuade people to take part in it or to support it,to adopt different technquies to achieve the goals-a social movement must have some amount of organizational framework.
(7)The techniques and the results of_a social movement may adopt its own techniques or method to achieve its goal.There is no certainty regarding it. It may follow peaceful or conflicting,violonce or non-violont,compulsive or persuasive,democratic or undemocratic means or methods to achieve its goal.The same thing is true of the result.It may successful or it may fail;it may become partial success or atleast it may create a general awakening in the public regarding the issue.

THEORIES OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Theoretical perspective or approach guides the selection of facts, their arrangement, classification and interpretation. The same movements can be constructed and interpreted in many different ways, depending upon theoretical perspective from which one looks at the phenomena. There are different approaches to study social movements. But at the same time we should remember that empirical processes are not neat to fit into any one approach. Social and political processes are complex and have their own logic. Moreover, no approach is in pure form. There are variations among the followers of the same theoretical perspective. There are different perspectives among the Marxists and also among the liberals. What is provided here is a broad framework, as guide of a particular approach.
Theories  Relative Deprivation
The term relative deprivation refers to deprivation or disadvantage which a group experiences, not in absolute objective terms, but in comparison with a reference group. Relative deprivation is not measured by objective standards but always in reference to another group.

For example, the economic situation of school teachers may be improving. However, regardless of how much they are paid and how big a pay raise they get, they might still feel deprived if they perceive other non-gazetted government officials to be doing better. Therefore, relative deprivation is not to be understood in terms of the actual situation of a group of people but in terms of how they judge their situation relative to another group.

There is also a gap between people's aspirations and their achievement. For example, in many agrarian societies which won freedom from colonial rule, people's expectations shot up. In fact, exposure to mass media, political participation, and the spirit of nationalism led to a revolution of rising expectations. But Where was no corresponding improvement in their standard of living. This leads to frustration and call for concerted action.

James Davies (1992) proposed a strain theory which is based on the gap between expectations and the capacity to achieve those expectations. If people's expectations continue to rise and their levels of satisfaction decline, or if they perceive that the opportunities to achieve them are somehow blocked, there will be considerable social strain leading to collective action. Anti-untouchability movements and women's movements are explained in part by variants of strain theory or relative deprivation theory.

Resource Mobilization Theory

Structural strain and relative deprivation may spread discontent in society. But widespread discontent is not enough to launch a movement. There must be a leader or leaders who can mobilize the resources—people, money, channels of communication, and commitment of time. Leaders formulate specific goals, provide the ideology, and deliver their messages in such an effective manner that they resonate with the right people. Sometimes an organizational format also becomes necessary to recruit large numbers of people, to assign duties and responsibilities, and to allocate resources.

Resource mobilization theory is helpful in explaining several contemporary social movements. The women's movement, student movements in Assam, the Narmada Andolan, and various religious revivalist movements demonstrate the importance of resource mobilization. 

MARXIAN  THEORY

Scholars following the Marxist approach to analyse various social movements and those who are involved in social movements claiming to be Marxist are primarily interested in bringing about revolutionary change in society. According to the Marxist approach conflict is the central core of social movements. There are different kinds of conflicts in society. Some conflicts are between individuals for personal power, style of functioning, between the communities—social, ethnic, religious, regional etc.— and other conflicts are around material interest and domination of one over the others. The nature of the Dnon-class conflict varies from society to society and can be resolved through negotiations and institutional mechanism. Sometimes though not always such conflict is in a garb of ‘class’/economic conflict. That is, economic conflict of different classes belonging to separate communities take the form of ethnic conflict. Class conflict is located in economic structure of society, in-built in the production and distribution system. It is around domination and subjugation between the classes. Those who own means of production dominate social and political system. In all forms of class society specific form of production predominates, which influences other forms of social relations. Ralph Miliband observes, ” Class domination can never be purely ‘economic’, or purely ‘cultural’: it must always have a strong and pervasive ‘political’ content, not least because the law is crystallized form which politics assumes in providing the necessary sanction and legitimation of all forms of domination. In this sense, ‘politics’ sanctions what is ‘permitted’, and therefore ‘permits’ the relations between the members of different and conflicting classes, inside and outside their ‘relation of production’.”

Those who own and control the means of production take away the surplus from those who produce. They accumulate surplus for their end and expand and perpetuate their control over the society. The former may be feudal lord in feudal system or industrial bourgeois in capitalist system. Antagonistic interests between the propertied and labour classes are inherent in a class-based society that generates contradictions. The former use the coercive as well as persuasive power of the state, and also other institutions, including religion, culture, education, mass media etc, to perpetuate their hegemony in society and to control the exploited classes. The latter resist, protest and occasionally revolt or launch organised and collective action against the dominance of the propertied classes. It is their effort to bring about revolutionary political change by overthrowing the dominant classes in power. In short, class struggle is the central driving force for resistance. Such collective actions take the form of social movements.

Though to Marxists, structural causes of conflicting economic interests are central, number of Marxist scholars have begun to pay attention to ethnic, religious and other cultural factors. Some of them have begun to analyse the nature of the consciousness of exploited classes. According to Marxist scholars, members of the same class not only have common interests vis-a-vis other classes, but also share a common consciousness regarding their position in society that they share common interests. This facilitates their collective action against the ruling classes and state.

They assert that the parliamentary democracy in capitalist state protects the interests of the haves and facilitates exploitation of the labour. Hence the conflict between the haves and have-nots cannot be resolved through institutional mechanism. A.R. Desai argued in the 1960s that civil and democratic rights of the underprivileged were increasingly violated in capitalist system. The state failed to provide basic human rights of the vast majority of the exploited classes. The have-nots in rural areas were deprived of their livelihood natural resources of land, forest and water. People resist against anti-people measures of the state and dominant classes. Through various organised and unorganised struggles the poor demand for the protection of their basic rights. He asserted, “The parliamentary form of government, as a political institutional device, has proved to be inadequate to continue or expand concrete democratic rights of the people. This form, either operates as a shell within which the authority of capital perpetuates itself, obstructing or reducing the opportunities for people to consciously participate in the process of society, or is increasingly transforming itself into a dictatorship, where capital sheds some of its democratic pretensions and rules by open, ruthless dictatorial means. Public protests will continue till people have ended the rule of capital in those countries where it still persists. They will also continue against those bureaucratic totalitarian political regimes where the rule of capital has ended, but where due to certain peculiar historical circumstances Stalinist bureaucratic, terrorist political regimes have emerged. The movements and protests of people will continue till adequate political institutional forms for the realisation and exercise of concrete democratic rights are found (1965).”

For Marxists, social movements are just not a protest and expression of the grievances. The exploited classes are not interested in reforming this or that institutions though they do fight for incremental rights to strengthen their strength. For instance working class fights for more wages, regulation of work, social security and also participation in management. Through this they build up solidarity among the workers and expand their struggles. Ultimately their attempt is to crack the dominant political system so that in the process the struggles move in the direction of revolutionary changes in the ownership of means of production and over through the dominant state structure. The struggles of the oppressed are both violent and non-violent depending upon the strength and means adopted by the state and propertied classes for the oppression. They are not averse to violent path but it does not mean that they always follow the violent means. For them the means is not that important as the ends. They often highlight the violence and oppression of the state and the dominant classes against the exploited classes. In such a situation the latter are left with no choice to counter the adversaries with the same method.

There is a good deal of debate among Marxist scholars on theoretical and methodological issues. Recently a group of Marxist historians, the ‘Subaltern Studies’ group, has begun  to study ‘history from below’. They criticise the ‘traditional’ Marxist historians for ignoring the history of the masses, as if the ‘subaltern’ classes do not make history of their own, depending solely on the advanced classes or the elite for organisation and guidance. It is argued that the traditional Marxist scholars have undermined cultural factors and viewed a linear development of class consciousness (Guha 1983). On the other hand, the Subaltern Studies historians are strongly criticised by other Marxist scholars for ignoring structural factors and viewing ‘consciousness’ as independent of structural contradictions. They are accused of being Hegelian ‘idealists’.

STRUCTURAL— FUNCTIONAL THEORY

There is a great deal of variation amongst the non-Marxist scholars, in their approach to the analysis of social movements. The ideological positions regarding a need for social and/or political change, and the role of movements therein differ. It is argued by several liberal scholars such as William Kornhauser, Robert Nisbet, Edward Shils and others that mass movements are the product of mass societies which are extremist and anti-democratic. These scholars are in favour of excluding the masses from day-to-day participation in politics, which hampers the efficient functioning of the government. Some Indian scholars who approved of the agitation for independence from foreign rule, did not favour agitation by people in the post-independence period. They condemned them outright as ‘dangerous’ and ‘dysfunctional’ for ‘civilised society’. Though some other liberals do not favour revolutionary change in the political and economic structure, they advocate ‘political change’ which is confined to change in government and political institutions. A few are for ‘revolutionary’ change but they differ from Marxist scholars in class analysis. They lay emphasis on political institutions and culture. In their analysis of the movements, some do not inquire into social and economic causes of conflict and collective struggles. Others differ in their emphasis on the causes responsible for the movements. Some emphasise individual psychological traits, some focus on elite power struggles and their manipulation; and some others emphasise the importance of cultural rather than economic factors.

The scholars who adhere to the theory of political development consider that the rising aspirations of the people are not adequately met by existing political institutions which are rigid or incompetent. As the gap between the expectations of the people and performance of the system widens, ‘political instability and disorder’ leading to mass upsurge increases (Huntington 1968). Rajni Kothari argued that ‘direct action’ is inevitable in the context of India’s present-day ‘parliamentary democracy’. ‘The general climate of frustration, the ineffectiveness of known channels of communication, the alienation and atomisation of the individual, the tendency towards regimentation and the continuous state of conflict (which may remain latent and suppressed for a time) between the rulers and the ruled—all these make the ideal of self-government more and more remote and render parliamentary government an unstable form of political organisation’ (1960).

It is also argued by some that that public protests have a certain ‘functional utility’ even in a parliamentary form of government. David Bayley (1962) observes that before and after independence, a large number of the people felt that the institutional means of redress for grievances, frustrations and wrongs—actual or fancied—were inadequate.

RESOURCE MOBILISATION THEORY

Resource Mobilisation theory is an outcome of rational choice theory. It is based on the assumption that individuals’ actions are motivated by goals that express their preferences. They act within the given constrains and available choices. It is not possible for all individuals to get all that they want; they must make choices within the available possibilities at a given point of time. Rational choice theories argue that individuals must make a rational choice regarding what is the best for them in a situation; and accordingly anticipate and calculate the outcome of their actions. “Rational individuals choose the alternatives that is likely to give them the greatest satisafaction”.

Some of the proponents of this theory argue that social movements for revolutionary changes by the marginal sections is out of impulse and emotion. Therefore, they do not sustain for long and fail. It was called resource mobilisation theory because the theory purported to show that the success of a movement depended on the resources available to be used. These resources arose from inducing individuals to participate and contribute to the cost. Individuals participate because they see the benefits to be derived from joining. Success also depends on the movement being able to link to other networks of groups and organisations. The resource mobilisation theory’s stress was wholly on the strategy to make the movement succeed in demanding for a change in government policies or legislation. Thus it is sometimes said that the theory focused on political action, or the realm of politics rather than on civil society.

Jenkins and Perrow argued that protest and movement formation only occurs when the necessary resources are pumped into it. According to them struggles by powerless and poor groups only take place when rich benefactors take an interest in their struggle and pump resources into it. In the case of the farm workers, Jenkins and Perrow argue that their struggle only got going, properly, when middle class liberals (in the 60s) decided to champion their cause.

Resource mobilisation theory (RMT)
 •    Reacts against the older view of social movements (e.g. Communism, Nazism) as an irrational protest of the marginalised and as tending to “extremism” (and so illegitimate and “not really political”)
      (e.g. black civil rights, environmentalism) as individually rational attempts to mobilise resources in pursuit of “politics by other means” hence  driven by people with resources, embedded in stable networks (and so legitimate political actors!)
• Tends to reproduce professional organiser’s perspective (e.g. Greenpeace, Amnesty): tackling the “free rider” problem to build strong and effective movements (Freeman) through organisation and selective incentives for participation
The theory emphasises entrepreneurial skill of the leaders of the movements. They mobilise resources — professional, finances, moral support and networking- from within and outside to sustain their struggles. The leaders of the succesful movements have skill to create organisation and mobilise people. In the process common goals are articulated and consensus is created so that all the participants accept the goals.
Rajendra Singh summarises the major assumptions of RMT. They are:

 a)   social movements must be understood in terms of conflict model of collective action;
 b)  there is no basic difference between institutional and non-institutional collective actions;
 c)   both institutional and non-institutional collective actions contain conflicts of interests built in the system of institutionalised power relations;

d)     social movements involve the rational pursuit of interests by competing groups;

 e)  goals and grievances, conflicts and contestations are inherently present in all relations of power, and as such, they themselves cannot explain the formation of social movements;

 f)   the formation of social movements, therefore, is determined by the changes in resources, organisation and opportunities for collective action;

 g)  success and effectiveness of collective action is understood in terms of material benefit or the actor being recognised as a political person; and

h) finally, as Jenkins visualises, the mobilisation of men in contemporary social movements involves the use of large-scale, advanced communication techniques, bureaucratised organisation and utilitarian drives and initiatives. (2001)


RELATIVE DEPRIVATION THEORY

The theory of relative deprivation developed by American scholars (Gurr 1970) has also guided some studies on agitation and mass movements.

Relative deprivation is defined as actors’ perception of discrepancy between their value expectations and their environment’s apparent value capabilities. Value expectations are the goods and conditions of life to which people believe they are justifiably entitled. The referents of value capabilities are to be found largely in the social and physical environment; they are the conditions that determine people’s perceived chances of getting or keeping the values they legitimately expect to attain. Gurr writes: “The frustration- aggression and the related threat-aggression mechanisms provide the basic motivational link between Relative Deprivation and the potential for collective violence”. Gurr also links three other concepts to relative deprivation, namely dissonance, anomie and conflict. The second of these, anomie is important in its effect to value opportunities. There are three models as to how the differentiation of value expectations and value capabilities has impact on relative deprivation. Decremental deprivation model describes the situation where the expectations are stable but capabilities declines. In aspirational model the capabilities remain the same but the expectations increase. The last model, J-curve or progressive deprivation model, fits to the situations when expectations and capabilities first increase hand in hand but then capabilities stop to increase or decrease while expectations still go on.

Those who perceive deprivation and as a result experience a feeling of frustration become aggressive. They are ‘jealous’ of those who have more. They protest or revolt against those who have more. They do not deal with the sources of deprivation. For Gurr, ‘deprivation’ is primarily psychological; therefore, he does not deal with the socio-economic structure which is the source of deprivation. If such sense of deprivation is confined to an individual against another individual it leads to crime. When it becomes collective perception - deprivation of region, community or caste - it takes the form of collective action. But it is not accompanied with ideology for the social system, it remains a protest or rebellion and hardly takes a form of social movement. They become ‘temporary aberrations’ rather than as ‘ongoing processes of change’. Relative deprivation is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for protest movements. M.S. A. Rao argues, ‘a sufficient level of understanding and reflection is required on the part of the participants, and they must be able to observe and perceive the contrast between the social and cultural conditions of the privileged and those of the deprived, and must realise that it is possible to do something about it’ (1979: 207).

CLASSIFICATION OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Generally those who follow Marxist framework examine social movements in terms of their potentialities for revolutionary transformation in society. They characterise the movements in reference to not only of the participants and leaders’ ideology as well as their immediate and long term objectives but also the scholars’ own expectations from social movements. In this framework the movements are classified on the basis of what they attain or likely to attain and the objectives of the collective action against the political system. According to this theoretical perspective social movements are of three types: revolt or rebellion, reform, and revolution. Revolt or rebellion protests against the political system or regime and may also make attempts to change in the authority government  and/or ruling elite/ rulers. But it does not question nor it aims at changing the political system. In short, the movement is against the regime rather than the system. A revolt is a challenge to political authority, aimed at overthrowing the government. A rebellion is an attack on existing authority without any intention of seizing state power to change the system.

The social movement which aims at bringing certain changes in the system and not transforming the system completely is called reformist movement. Such movements question the functioning of political institutions and build pressure on the government to introduce certain changes in their structure and procedures. While doing so they do not question the political system as a whole; nor do they relate a political institution with the larger political structure. In other words they focus on reforming a particular part of an institution or the system. For example, the movement that primarily aims at changing election rules and procedures does not relate elections with the economic structure and power relationship in society. In that sense it is reformist movement. Or, various social reform movements try to reform certain customs like child marriage or dowry, norms such as animal sacrifice, untouchability; or social arrangements such as hierarchical order in status and social mobility rather than challenging the whole social order based on pollution and purity around the principles of inequality. When women’s movements struggle to have reservation for women in the parliament it is reformist movement aiming at changing the representation system. Reform does not challenge the political system per se. It attempts to bring about changes in the relations between the parts of the system in order to make it more efficient, responsive and workable.In a revolution, a section or sections of society launch an organised struggle to overthrow not only the established government and regime but also the socio-economic structure which sustains it, and replace the structure by an alternative social order. For instance the Naxalite movement is not only challenging the particular government but aims at over-throwing the state which is feudal/semi-feudal and desires to establish communist state. Or the dalit movement aims at transforming social order based on caste system and desires to create egalitarian social system. In the same way when women movement challenges patriarchy in society and attempts its abolition then it becomes revolutionary movement.

Nature of social movements often overlaps. Many movements undergo change in the course of time. Some apparently reformist movements may take revolutionary course; and some which begin with revolutionary agenda become reformist also. All social movements do not necessarily begin with clear objectives in terms of the maintenance or the transformation of the system. They often get shaped in the process through the leaders, participants and ideology.

New Social Movements:

Since last five decades, especially after the proliferation of the Black Civil Rights Movement in the West in 1950s and 1960s, students movements in 1960s and 1970s, Women's Movement, anti-nuclear protests, gay rights, animal rights, minority nationalism etc. ethnic movements in 1970s and thereafter, social movements has emerged to be an area of special attention. There have been sincere efforts by the social scientists to redefine social movements from a critical and cognitive perspective. In this effort the prevalent schemes of analysis were questioned and many of the elements were identified in these social movement and at times several marginal issues were emphasized in a new contexts. The emergence of new forms of collective action especially in Western Europe and North America posed serious challenges to the social movement theorists to conceptualize this phenomena in terms of the prevailing discourse on social movement studies

Till 1950s the workers movements, peasants and tribal movements, at times caste, race, or linguistic and ethnic movements or other varieties of collective mobilisations are mostly explained within the Marxian framework of class struggle and the functionalist framework of mal functioning of the social order.

Since the middle of the last century 'social movements have moved from non- institutionalized margins of society to its very core'. The manifestation of new forms of organised collective actions since 1950s has added several new dimensions to the issues of social movement.

Social movements were analyzed mostly in terms of the ideological and organizational orientations. these perspectives of studying social movements were deterministic.

The Marxist scholars highlighted the class ideology of the collective mobilization. It emphasized on the role ideology that provided the legitimacy to such mobilizations. It focused on the unequal access to and control over the means of production between the two antagonistic classes that led to conflict in the society. In the functional analysis on the other, the organizational aspect of social movement articulated. For the Functionalist social movements were sources of potential disruption to an organisation. Organized collective actions are viewed as dysfunctional aspect of the society. Here only by assigning a marginal position to social movement 'integrity of the functional theoretical system was ensured. On the other hand, though the Marxist analysis is concerned with social transformation, this has identified the 'classes' to be the sole agents of social transformation. Non-class movements are viewed critically, and sometimes with contempt or hostility' (Scott, A. 1990: 2).

Significantly both the Marxism and Functionalism provided single order explanation of the social movement. However the proliferation of social movements in the 50s and 60s asked for a new perspective for analysis as there were new orientations.

Some of the contemporary social movements are oriented to achieve in some form or the other materialistic goal. The new social movements on the other, are oriented to be non-materialistic, resort to plural, multiple and wide varieties of collective mobilisation, highlight the issues which cut across the boundaries of state, class, societies, culture and the nation.

It was indeed difficult to conceptualize the essence of all new forms of collective action within the paradigm of ideology or the rationally organised interest group. The practices of these new form of collective actions social movements are essentially non-violent, pragmatic, non-integrated, non-hierarchical, non- coercive, cross-class, cross-ideology, cross age in their constituencies (Hegedus, 1990: 63).

Larana, Johnston and Guesfield (1994) suggest that the analysis of new social movements be advanced cross-culturally and by contrasting them with the class based movements of the past.  Larana, Johnston and Guesfield (1994) suggest the following characteristic features of the new social movement:

 a)    There is no clear structural role of the participants of the new social movement as, very often than not, they have diffuse social status as youth, student, women, minority, professional groups etc.

 b)   Ideologically these movements posited in sharp contrast to the Marxian concept of ideology of the working class movement. It is difficult to characterize new social movements as conservative or liberal, right or left, capitalist or socialist. These movements exhibit plural ideas and values.

 c)    Mobilisations are linked to issues of symbolic and cultural identities than to economic issues.

 d)   Action within these movements is a complex mix of the collective and individual confirmation of identity. Indeed the relation between the individual and the collective is blurred in these movements.

 e)    These movements involve personal and intimate aspects of human life, e.g. eating, dressing enjoying, loving etc habits and patterns.

 f)    Non-violence and civil disobedience etc. are the dominant patterns of collective mobilisation to challenge the dominant-norms of conduct.

 g)   The proliferation of these movements are caused by the credibility crisis of the conventional channels for political participation.

 h)   The new social movements are segmented diffused and decentralized (Ibid. :6-15).

Alan Scott identified the following prominent characteristics of these movements:
 a) These movements are primarily social and are more concerned with cultural sphere and mobilisation of civil society on socio-cultural issues, than with the political issues like seizure of power.
b) These movements are to be located within civil society and these are little concerned to challenge the state directly. These movements rather defend the civil societies against encroachment from increasingly technocratic state or from 'inner colonialisation' by society's technocratic sub-structure.
c) These social movements attempt to bring about change through changing values and developing alternative life-styles. These social movements are concerned with cultural innovations and creation of new life-styles. These also pose a challenge to the traditional values. 'The focus on symbols and identities is viewed as the source of new social movement's significance'. The new social movements bring about changes by challenging values and identities of the social actors rather than by more conventional and direct political actions. The processes of transformation of values, personal identities and symbols can be achieved through creation of alternative life-style and the discursive reformation of individual and collective wills.

The main characteristics of new social movements organization are summarized by Scott as follows:
i)                    locally based or centered on small groups
ii)                   organised around specific, often local and single issue
iii)                cycle of movement activity and mobilisation; i.e. vacillation between periods of high and low activity,
iv)                often loose systems of authority,
v)                  shifting membership,
vi)                'common social critique' as the ideological frame of reference (Scott, 1990: 18).


In the process of globalisation when the state is emerging to be more and more technocratic and all-powerful the voices and views of the individual citizen against the discontent of various forms remain mostly unheard. Again in the countries where the state represent the dominant section of the population, and the state machinery is involved in the corrupt practices, the access of the marginalised people even to the minimum need of the life remained unrealized. Social movements provide a framework to develop a critic of the society. It brings the institutional arrangements of the society under close scrutiny. The organising mechanisms, collective activism and the leadership of social movement provide the required space not only to develop a critic of the society but also for a transformative politics within the given structure. It also provides the space for the emergence of plural social structure with representative civil bodies to function as watchdog in a liberal democracy. Through this critic social movement produces a new collective identity. Eyerman and Jamison (1991) have tried to define social movements as processes in the formation by which individuals create new kind of social identity. To them all social life can be seen as a combination of action and construction whose meaning is deprived from the context and the understanding of the actors derive form it. They emphasize the creative role of consciousness and cognition in human action, what they call the cognitive praxis, which transforms groups of individual into social movement. Thus the cognitive praxis gives social movement particular meaning and consciousness.




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