Kapitel
Open Access
1. Contextualizing the Troubles: Investigating Deeply Divided Societies through Social Movements Research
-
Lorenzo Bosi
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- Acknowledgements 9
- 1. Contextualizing the Troubles: Investigating Deeply Divided Societies through Social Movements Research 11
- 2. What Did the Civil Rights Movement Want? Changing Goals and Underlying Continuities in the Transition from Protest to Violence 33
- 3. Vacillators or Resisters? The Unionist Government Responses to the Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland 53
- 4. White Negroes and the Pink IRA. External Mainstream Media Coverage and Civil Rights Contention in Northern Ireland 71
- 5. ‘We Are the People’: Protestant Identity and Collective Action in Northern Ireland, 1968-1985 91
- 6. Ulster Loyalist Accounts of Armed Mobilization, Demobilization, and Decommissioning 111
- 7. Social Movements and Social Movement Organizations:Recruitment, Ideology, and Splits 129
- 8. Movement Inside and Outside of Prison: The H-Block Protest 147
- 9. ‘Mother Ireland, Get Off Our Backs’: Republican Feminist Resistance in the North of Ireland 165
- 10. ‘One Community, Many Faces’: Non-sectarian Social Movements and Peace-building in Northern Ireland and Lebanon 185
- 11. The Peace People: Principled and Revolutionary Non-violence in Northern Ireland 203
- Afterword: Social Movements, Long-term Processes, and Ethnic Division in Northern Ireland 223
- List of Authors 239
- Index 241
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- Acknowledgements 9
- 1. Contextualizing the Troubles: Investigating Deeply Divided Societies through Social Movements Research 11
- 2. What Did the Civil Rights Movement Want? Changing Goals and Underlying Continuities in the Transition from Protest to Violence 33
- 3. Vacillators or Resisters? The Unionist Government Responses to the Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland 53
- 4. White Negroes and the Pink IRA. External Mainstream Media Coverage and Civil Rights Contention in Northern Ireland 71
- 5. ‘We Are the People’: Protestant Identity and Collective Action in Northern Ireland, 1968-1985 91
- 6. Ulster Loyalist Accounts of Armed Mobilization, Demobilization, and Decommissioning 111
- 7. Social Movements and Social Movement Organizations:Recruitment, Ideology, and Splits 129
- 8. Movement Inside and Outside of Prison: The H-Block Protest 147
- 9. ‘Mother Ireland, Get Off Our Backs’: Republican Feminist Resistance in the North of Ireland 165
- 10. ‘One Community, Many Faces’: Non-sectarian Social Movements and Peace-building in Northern Ireland and Lebanon 185
- 11. The Peace People: Principled and Revolutionary Non-violence in Northern Ireland 203
- Afterword: Social Movements, Long-term Processes, and Ethnic Division in Northern Ireland 223
- List of Authors 239
- Index 241