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E-raamat: Observing Protest from a Place: The World Social Forum in Dakar (2011)

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Social movements throughout the world have been central to history, politics, society, and culture, and have had a global reach and impact. This important volume examines the impact of the Global Justice Movement as seen from the southern hemisphere, exploring in the process a number of vital issues: how can transnational social movements be analyzed without neglecting division of labor and inequalities in international networks? What are the methodological problems of studying international activist gatherings and how to overcome them?

The authors draw upon a collective survey from the World Social Forum in Dakar (2011), contributing to the literature on social movements, with special focus on the material dimensions of protest.



Social movements throughout the world have been central to history, politics, society, and culture. Observing Protest from a Place examines the impact of one such campaign, the global justice movement, as seen from the southern hemisphere. Drawing upon a collective survey from the 2011 World Social Forum in Dakar, the contributions explore a number of vital issues, including the methodological problems of studying international activist gatherings and how scholars can overcome those challenges. By demonstrating the importance of the global justice movement and the role of non-governmental organizations for participants in the southern hemisphere, this volume is an important addition to the literature on community action.
Acknowledgements, Introduction, What can quantitative surveys tell us
about GJM activists?. Activist encounters at the World Social Forum, Mapping
a population and its taste in tactics, Womens issues and activists at the
World Social Forum in Dakar, Division of labor and partnerships in
transnational social movements, Making waste (in)visible at the Dakar World
Social Forum, Latin Americans at the World Social Forum in Dakar, Tania
Navarro Rodríguez and Héloïse Nez Groups and organizations at the WSF,
Stepping back from your figures to figure out more, Conclusion, Technical
appendix: Surveying an international event through a multinational team,
General data on participants, Appendix to
Chapter 8 on groups and
organizations: Clusters obtained by Ascending Hierarchical Clustering,
Questionnaire for participants to the Dakar World Social Forum, Editors'
Biographies, Bibliography, Index
Johanna Siméant is professor of political science at the University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne (CESSP), and has published La cause des sans-papiers (1998), Le travail humanitaire (2002), La grève de la faim (2009), Contester au Mali (2014) and edited books.|Marie-Emmanuelle Pommerolle is assistant professor of political science at Paris 1 Sorbonne University. She is currently director of the French Institute of Research in Africa (IFRA) in Nairobi (Kenya). Isabelle Sommier is Full Professor of Political Sociology at Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne University, former director of the CRPS (Centre de recherches politiques de la Sorbonne) and currently Deputy Director of the CESSP (Centre européen de sociologie et de science politique, a fusion between CRPS and CSE Bourdieu institute). She has published on the theory of social movements, political violence, radicalization and terrorism.