1st Edition

The Power Of Politics New Social Movements In France

By Jan Willem Duyvendak Copyright 1995
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the turbulent years of the 1960s and 1970s, France, like other European countries and the United States, was rocked by a new wave of social movements. The early development of a strong antinuclear movement during the 1970s made France the prototypical country for new social movements (NSMs). However, in the 1980s, these French NSMs experienced a strong decline. In this book, Jan Willem Duyvendak compares the surprising development of these NSMs in France—for peace, the environment, an end to nuclear technology, solidarity, squatters' rights, women's rights, and gay rights—to the development of similar campaigns in Germany, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. Although all of these countries share more or less the same economic characteristics, they have different political traditions. Duyvendak finds that by the 1980s, the new social movements were weaker in France because of France's tradition of "old" political conflicts. He concludes that because France was still beset with political splits between center periphery and urban-country as well as religious and class strife, the development of French society during the 1980s took place at the expense of these new social movements

    New Social Movements -- The Movements That Vanished -- A Theory: Social Movements and Politics -- New Social Movements and the French Political Opportunity Structure -- Formal and Informal Politics1 -- Polarizing and Paralyzing Politics -- New Social Movements in France -- The Aborted Wave -- Seven Social Movements -- Conclusions -- Some Retrospective and Prospective Remarks -- The Newspaper Research -- French Governments -- SMOs Interviewed -- Bibliography per Movement

    Biography

    Jan Willem Duyvendakis a research fellow at the Amsterdam School for Social Science Research.