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Authors: Judith R Blau
Social Movement Politics and Organization
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identity, culture, and spontaneity. This chapter seeks to intervene in this project by reviewing the growing body of research that is explicitly organizational in its focus and conceptualizes movement politics and organization as interlinked.
Such work promises to move social movement theory beyond such simple
dichotomies as spontaneity versus organization and culture versus structure. At
the same time, organizational approaches need to consider the concerns cur-
rently associated with more culturally oriented frameworks.
The first part of the chapter briefly reviews the original resource mobilization paradigm and describes some of its elaborations and criticisms. The remainder
of the chapter focuses on recent work that emphasizes the more organized
dimensions of social movement politics, examining the organizational processes
that promote institutionalization and the implications of what has recently been called ``the social movement society'' (Meyer and Tarrow, 1998) for the relationship between spontaneity and organization. The chapter concludes with a provi-
sional treatment of what I think is a central problem for future social movement theory: how to integrate organizational and cultural processes in the study of
social movement dynamics. This issue is particularly important in light of the
transnational context of many contemporary efforts at social change.
The Resource Mobilization
Mobilization Paradigm
The original resource mobilization (RM) paradigm staked out its terrain boldly
by proclaiming that in contemporary (that is, advanced capitalist) societies
discontent is relatively constant and therefore cannot explain the emergence
and development of social movements. Instead, the availability of resources
external to the movement accounts for the ups and downs of mobilization.
According to McCarthy and Zald (1977), social movements (which they define
as preferences for change) are increasingly reliant on formalized social move-
ment organizations (SMOs) established by `ìssue entrepreneurs'' (who might go
so far as to manufacture grievances), directed by a professional staff, and more concerned with securing external support (both financial and moral) than creating a mass-based membership of the disenfranchised and aggrieved. McCarthy
and Zald also introduced such concepts as social movement industry and social
movement sector to make the point that social movements can be fruitfully
analyzed using concepts drawn from organizational sociology.
This new focus on organizations as a critical dimension of social movements
created something of a growth industry for sociologists concerned with extend-
ing (and legitimating) the study of those protest movements of the 1960s and
early 1970s in which many of them had actively participated. Resource mobil-
ization theory offered a compelling alternative to the then dominant view that
social movements were manifestations of system breakdown, alienation, and
participant irrationality, only slightly more organized than panics, crazes, and fads. An emphasis on resources and rationality provided a seemingly more
accurate, and less derogatory, portrayal of what the civil rights, feminist, anti-war, and new left movements were all about.
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Mayer Zald, in an essay titled ``Looking Backward to Look Forward: Reflec-
tions on the Past and Future of the Resource Mobilization Research Program,''
summarizes the core assumptions of the RM perspective: (a) since all behavior
entails costs, discontent is not automatically translated into social movement
activity but entails some (at least ``primitive'') weighing of costs and benefits; (b) resources are mobilized from a range of sources, including but not limited to the aggrieved group; (c) organizing activity is critical since resources need to be
aggregated and deployed; (d) state and societal facilitation or repression influences the costs of participation; and (e) movement outcomes are problematic
since there is no simple relationship between the mobilization of social move-
ments and their success (Zald, 1992). This summary combines the premises of
the early McCarthy±Zald formulation of resource mobilization theory and what
some would consider a distinct theoretical development ± the political process
model.
Early political process theorists, while also emphasizing the importance of
organization and rationality, noted that even if resources are widely available, political conditions also influence the costs and benefits of collective action. To understand the emergence of social movements, it is therefore critical to consider changes in the political context, especially the vulnerability of authorities to outside challenges and what their incentives are to repress or facilitate collective action. The focus of these political approaches is on varieties of collective action and outcomes and not on organizational dynamics per se. Organizations matter,
but mainly insofar as they provide local networks that can be used for mass
recruitment and support the development of an insurgent consciousness or
``cognitive liberation'' (McAdam, 1982).
In the political process model, internal group resources (organizations, institutions, constituents) are more central to movement emergence (although not
necessarily development) than external support, which is thought to channel
insurgency in more moderate directions. In addition, the actions of state officials and other political contingencies are determinant. Recent work in the political
process tradition has tended to de-emphasize organizational processes, focusing
instead on macropolitical issues such as the patterning and dynamics of protest
cycles and cross-national comparisons of state structures and protest action.
The Critics
Whether resource mobilization theory and political process models are consid-
ered to be of one piece or separate approaches, both have come under fire for
being too structural and inattentive to psychological and cultural processes. As Steven Barkan succinctly puts it, `Ìn the world of resource mobilization theory, ideology, culture, interpretation, emotions, the minutiae of daily interaction, and other nonstructural aspects barely existed'' (Barkan, n.d., pp. 7±8). A second
criticism has faulted resource mobilization theory for privileging organization
over spontaneity and shifting attention from the disruptive potential of mass
protest to the more institutionalized, and less transformative, world of conven-
tional politics.
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These criticisms have been taken up in a variety of ways. Some researchers
have sought to modify the rational actor assumptions of resource mobilization
and political process theories by developing a more nuanced and contextualized
social psychology of mobilization. Here the focus has shifted from interests to
identity, and, more recently, to the role of emotions in social movement
dynamics. Others have responded to the dominance of resource mobilization
theory by arguing for the importance of cultural processes, both at the macro-
level of political discourse and the framing of movement demands, and at the
micro-level of meaning construction. Finally, a number of researchers have
attempted to integrate the new social movements perspective that, although it
developed roughly in tandem with resource mobilization approaches in the
United States, was shaped by a Western European political context and theoret-
ical sensibility. This work posits the centrality of collective identities in contemporary social movements, drawing a contrast to the redistributive concerns of
earlier class-based movements.
Taken together, these various approaches portray recent social movements as
predominately cultural phenomena that emphasize processes of identity con-
struction and are embedded in locally based social networks and less organized
forms of social interaction. Activists are defined less by what they do in the
political or legislative arena and more in terms of cultural or symbolic transgressions in the form of individualized lifestyle commitments and collective actions that attempt to challenge and change cultural discourse and consciousness. ``The media'' and ``the public'' are the main targets of these cultural challenges and strategic action has been replaced by symbolic action ± which can sometimes
appear as the antithesis of strategy.
Although this summary portrayal is certainly overstated it is meant to convey
the extent to which recent advances in social movement theory have eschewed
the field's earlier emphasis on social movement politics and organization. Barkan (n.d.) offers a cogent critique of the emerging cultural paradigm, especially that it has deflected attention from more strategic questions about movement outcomes and success. Still, as he notes, it is worthwhile to consider these theoretical developments sociologically: ``The elements of the emerging paradigm perhaps
hold particular appeal for scholars who have taken part in the women's, gay and
lesbian, and other ``new'' movements, just as the elements of resource mobiliza-
tion held special appeal for scholars who took part in the 1960s movements. If
today's movements are indeed more about identity than about strategy, more
about culture than about politics, then it's no accident that the emerging para-
digm appeals to many of today's movement scholars'' (Barkan, n.d., p. 12).
By the same token, it is important to situate future movement scholarship in
the substantive realities facing social movements today. In the remainder of this chapter I suggest that among the many concerns that activists face one stands
out: the need to negotiate a heavily institutionalized political environment that has ``normalized'' contention so much that it is considered fairly routine. In this new political context, where even many ``spontaneous'' demonstrations are
highly scripted, organizational analysis provides analytic leverage on the
processes by which movements become incorporated into national political
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structures and the implications of movement institutionalization for mounting
sustained challenges against the state.
Social Movement Institutionalization
In some ways, McCarthy and Zald's early portrayal of social movements is even
more accurate today. Social movement issues and actors have been incorporated
into the polity to a striking extent. Movement organizations look and act very
much like interest groups in the US system; green parties have gained consider-
able visibility and, in some cases, influence in Western Europe; and many of the opposition social movements that propelled East European and Latin American
democratic transitions are now established political actors (if not political parties). In contrasting takes on the same phenomenon, David Meyer and Sidney
Tarrow introduce the concept of thè`social movement society'' to capture the
idea that ``classical social movement modes of action may be becoming part of
the conventional repertoire of participation'' (Meyer and Tarrow, 1998, p. 4),
whereas Paul Burstein (1998) argues that social movements and interest groups
are essentially the same, and that even differences between thesèìnterest
organizations'' and parties have diminished.
The institutionalization of social movements is part of a longer historical trend in the nationalization of social movements. As both Tilly (1984) and Tarrow
(1994) have argued, the centralization of power in national states in the eight-
eenth century brought a concomitant shift in the repertoire of collective action from sporadic, spontaneous and, local forms of protest (bread riots, strikes) to more organized modes of action (mass demonstrations, petitions) better suited to putting pressure on national authorities. As a result, social movements, especially national ones, are more organized ± in the sense of being both less
characterized by spontaneous events and, well, more comprised of organiza-
tions.
A related feature of movement institutionalization is a convergence in forms of
action and organization: `òne of the characteristics of the movement society is
that social movements can combine disruptive and conventional activities and
forms of organization, while institutional actors like interest groups and parties increasingly engage in contentious behavior'' (Meyer and Tarrow, 1998, p. 25).
At the same time, so-called contentious behavior has been subject to redefinition as the legitimate repertoire of collective action has changed. Demonstrations and mass protests are more likely to take place by advance arrangement with
authorities and, although such events garner desired media attention and provide an opportunity for increasing solidarity, this ``policing of protest'' certainly undercuts spontaneity and the disruptive potential of collective challenges
(della Porta and Reiter, 1997).
One major implication of these trends is that formal organizations are
now more central than ever to movement politics in most democratic polities.
And movement organizations, unlike occasional outbursts of dissent, are
burdened with the requirements of organizational survival. They need resources
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± members, leaders, money ± to establish and sustain themselves. They also need
a minimal level of institutional legitimacy to convince powerful actors and