Across the globe, movements are confronting states and elites, challenging inequalities and mobilising for greater justice, a stronger voice, and progressive policy changes. In this article, I bridge the divide between Social Policy and the interdisciplinary field of Social Movement Studies. I examine how and why social movements, as actors in policy fields and social movement theories, matter for social policy. I argue that research on social movements as actors and engagement with social movement theories can open new horizons in Social Policy research by advancing our understanding of the politics of policy from a global perspective and strengthening our analytical and explanatory frameworks of agency, ideas, and power in the study of co...
This article responds to recent calls for bringing capitalism back into the study of social movement...
The contribution presents a critical summary and evaluation of literature on social movements
The content and the process of making policy serve as both stimuli and outcomes of social movements....
Given the growing interest in social movements as policy agenda setters, this paper investigates the...
This article explores the state of research on the "movement of movements" against neoliberal global...
Can social movements make a difference in global politics? That question is, ultimately, one that on...
Collective action and oppositional political activism are firmly established features of any society...
The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements is an innovative volume that presents a comprehensive explor...
This article explores the state of research on the ‘movement of movements’ against neoliberal global...
Social movement researchers have been interested in how forms of collective action advance social ch...
For three decades new social movements have undergone scrutiny from political scientists with much w...
Social movements have been studied from the perspective of several disciplines—sociology, anthropolo...
The social movement literature in Western Europe and North America has oriented much of its theoreti...
Why do social movements take the forms they do? How do activists\u27 efforts and beliefs interact wi...
This is the seventh post in the blog series „Movements and Institutions“. Social movements challen...
This article responds to recent calls for bringing capitalism back into the study of social movement...
The contribution presents a critical summary and evaluation of literature on social movements
The content and the process of making policy serve as both stimuli and outcomes of social movements....
Given the growing interest in social movements as policy agenda setters, this paper investigates the...
This article explores the state of research on the "movement of movements" against neoliberal global...
Can social movements make a difference in global politics? That question is, ultimately, one that on...
Collective action and oppositional political activism are firmly established features of any society...
The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements is an innovative volume that presents a comprehensive explor...
This article explores the state of research on the ‘movement of movements’ against neoliberal global...
Social movement researchers have been interested in how forms of collective action advance social ch...
For three decades new social movements have undergone scrutiny from political scientists with much w...
Social movements have been studied from the perspective of several disciplines—sociology, anthropolo...
The social movement literature in Western Europe and North America has oriented much of its theoreti...
Why do social movements take the forms they do? How do activists\u27 efforts and beliefs interact wi...
This is the seventh post in the blog series „Movements and Institutions“. Social movements challen...
This article responds to recent calls for bringing capitalism back into the study of social movement...
The contribution presents a critical summary and evaluation of literature on social movements
The content and the process of making policy serve as both stimuli and outcomes of social movements....