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Social Movement Studies - Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest

Social Movement Studies

Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest

Published By: Routledge
Volume Number: 7
Frequency: 3 issues per year
Print ISSN: 1474-2837
Online ISSN: 1474-2829
 

Aims & Scope

Social Movement Studies is an international and inter-disciplinary journal providing a forum for academic debate and analysis of extra-parliamentary political, cultural and social movements throughout the world. Social Movement Studies has a broad, inter-disciplinary approach designed to accommodate papers engaging with any theoretical school and which study the origins, development, organisation, values, context and impact of historical and contemporary movements active in all parts of the world. We understand our inter-disciplinary approach to include both contributions that engage with particular schools of thought relevant to social movements and popular protest and contributions that extend across disciplinary boundaries. Social Movement Studies aims to publish soundly researched analyses and to re-establish writing as intervention. From this broad and inclusive perspective we are interested in contributions dealing with social movements, popular protests and networks that support protest. This includes contributions dealing with but not restricted to:

  • movements of all types including gender, race, sexuality, indigenous people's rights,
  • disability, ecology, peace, youth, age, religion, animal rights and others,
  • forms of communication, media and representation engaged with social change, including the Internet and cybercultures,
  • networks of support and broad 'ways of life' engaged with alternative social systems,
  • appraisals of popular reactionary movements or populist movements of the 'right',
  • subcultures and countercultures, including such things as the place of dance, pleasure or music in resistance,
  • identities and the construction of collective identities
  • relations between protests and social structures, including situating movements in local, regional, national, international and global socio-economic and cultural contexts
  • theoretical reflections on the significance of social movements and protest.

If you work in these or related areas we would be very pleased to hear from you with a contribution. If you would like to discuss your potential contribution please contact the editors at social_movement_studies@keele.ac.uk or Social Movement Studies, School of Politics, International Relations and Philosophy, Keele University, Keele, Staffs, ST5 5BG, UK. If in the USA you can contact Ann Mische, Dept. of Sociology, Rutgers University, 54 Joyce Kilmer Avenue, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA or email at mische@rci.rutgers.edu

Peer Review
All research articles in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymized refereeing by at least two anonymous referees.

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