Social movements
Focus
1
Label
Social movements
Name
Social movements
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of49
- Social movements of the 1960s, searching for democracy, Stewart Burns
- Activism
- Let this radicalize you, organizing and the revolution of reciprocal care, Kelly Hayes and Mariame Kaba ; foreword by Maya Schenwar ; afterword by Harsha Walia
- Maud Wood Park archive, the power of organization, documents selected and interpreted by Melanie Gustafson, Part one
- Guns in American society, an encyclopedia of history, politics, culture, and the law, Gregg Lee Carter, editor
- Memes to movements, how the world's most viral media is changing social protest and power, An Xiao Mina
- Period, end of sentence, a new chapter in the fight for menstrual justice, Anita Diamant ; foreword by Melissa Berton
- Keep marching, how every woman can take action and change our world, Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner
- The purpose of power, how we come together when we fall apart, Alicia Garza
- Breaking the spell, a history of anarchist filmmakers, videotape guerrillas, and digital ninjas, Chris Robé
- Inventing the future, postcapitalism and a world without work, Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams
- Maud Wood Park archive, the power of organization, documents selected and interpreted by Melanie Gustafson, Part two
- The madness of crowds, gender, race and identity, Douglas Murray
- Extremism in America, a reader, edited by Lyman Tower Sargent
- Islam and the Arab Awakening, Tariq Ramadan
- Shoulder to shoulder, working together for a sustainable future, Evelyn Searle Hess
- Ideas and movements that shaped America, from the Bill of Rights to "Occupy Wall Street", Michael S. Green and Scott L. Stabler, editors
- The second coming of the invisible empire, the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s, William Rawlings
- Social conflict and social movements
- Virgin nation, sexual purity and American adolescence, Sara Moslener
- We do this 'til we free us, abolitionist organizing and transforming justice, Mariame Kaba ; foreword by Naomi Murakawa ; edited by Tamara K. Nopper
- Populism's power, radical grassroots democracy in America, Laura Grattan
- Studzinski, activism starting to shake up companies, produced by Bloomberg
- Manifesto, a century of isms, edited by Mary Ann Caws
- Hippies, Indians, and the fight for red power, Sherry L. Smith
- Twitter and tear gas, the power and fragility of networked protest, Zeynep Tufekci
- How did the kindergarten movement provide women with opportunities for professional development and social activism in the United States and internationally?, documents selected and interpreted by Ann Taylor Allen, Barbara Beatty, and Roberta Wollons
- How class works, power and social movement, Stanley Aronowitz
- Deflective Whiteness, co-opting Black and Latinx identity politics, Hannah Noel
- Crusader nation, the United States in peace and the Great War, 1898-1920, David Traxel
- A people's history of American empire, a graphic adaptation, Howard Zinn, Mike Konopacki, Paul Buhle
- Zapata lives!, histories and cultural politics in southern Mexico, Lynn Stephen
- The suppression of dissent, how the state and mass media squelch USAmerican social movements, Jules Boykoff
- The #MeToo movement, M.M. Eboch, Book editor
- Digitally enabled social change, activism in the Internet age, Jennifer Earl and Katrina Kimport
- The life and times of Pancho Villa, Friedrich Katz
- Free Angela Davis, and all political prisoners!, a transnational campaign for liberation, documents selected and interpreted by Dayo F. Gore with archival and editorial assistance from Bettina Aptheker
- From #BlackLivesMatter to Black liberation, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
- Post-modernism and the social sciences, insights, inroads, and intrusions, Pauline Marie Rosenau
- Social solutions to poverty, America's struggle to build a just society, Scott J. Myers-Lipton ; edited with contributions by Scott J. Myers-Lipton, foreword by Charles Lemert
- Social movements, 1768-2004, Charles Tilly
- The revolt of the public and the crisis of authority in the new millennium, by Martin Gurri
- When we fight, we win, twenty-first-century social movements and the activists that are transforming our world, Greg Jobin-Leeds and AgitArte ; foreword by Rinku Sen ; afterword by Antonia Darder
- How did Margaret Sanger's 1922 tour of Japan help spread the idea of birth control and inspire the formation of a Japanese birth control movement?, documents selected and interpreted by Peter C. Engelman, Cathy Moran Hajo, Esther Katz, and Rui Kohiyama
- Necessary trouble, Americans in revolt, Sarah Jaffe
- Who do you serve, who do you protect?, police violence and resistance in the United States, edited by Maya Schenwar, Joe Macaré and Alana Yu-lan Price ; foreword by Alicia Garza
- Rethinking American women's activism, Annelise Orleck
- Digitally enabled social change, activism in the Internet age, Jennifer Earl and Katrina Kimport
- Wages of rebellion, Chris Hedges