Pathways to Prohibition: Radicals, Moderates, and Social Movement OutcomesDuke University Press, 2003年8月21日 - 344 頁 Strategies for gradually effecting social change are often dismissed as too accommodating of the status quo. Ann-Marie E. Szymanski challenges this assumption, arguing that moderation is sometimes the most effective way to achieve change. Pathways to Prohibition examines the strategic choices of social movements by focusing on the fates of two temperance campaigns. The prohibitionists of the 1880s gained limited success, while their Progressive Era counterparts achieved a remarkable—albeit temporary—accomplishment in American politics: amending the United States Constitution. Szymanski accounts for these divergent outcomes by asserting that choice of strategy (how a social movement defines and pursues its goals) is a significant element in the success or failure of social movements, underappreciated until now. Her emphasis on strategy represents a sharp departure from approaches that prioritize political opportunity as the most consequential factor in campaigns for social change. Combining historical research with the insights of social movement theory, Pathways to Prohibition shows how a locally based, moderate strategy allowed the early-twentieth-century prohibition crusade both to develop a potent grassroots component and to transcend the limited scope of local politics. Szymanski describes how the prohibition movement’s strategic shift toward moderate goals after 1900 reflected the devolution of state legislatures’ liquor licensing power to localities, the judiciary’s growing acceptance of these local licensing regimes, and a collective belief that local electorates, rather than state legislatures, were best situated to resolve controversial issues like the liquor question. "Local gradualism" is well suited to the porous, federal structure of the American state, Szymanski contends, and it has been effectively used by a number of social movements, including the civil rights movement and the Christian right. |
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... WCTU's founding convention in 1874.123 While the WCTU may have been a refuge for many ambitious fraternal sisters , its initial purpose was to solidify the gains of a dramatic episode in the broader tem- perance movement : the Woman's ...
... WCTU and the Beal Law , " American Issue , 18 April 1902 , I. As elsewhere , WCTU membership data are derived from the Annual Meeting Minutes of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union . 55 Joseph R. Gusfield , Symbolic Crusade ...
... WCTU's resources were also diverted to woman's suffrage referenda in 1912 and 1913. State and local union reports indicate that WCTU members devoted considerable time and money to winning these campaigns . See , e.g. , Annual Meeting ...
內容
List of Figures ix | 9 |
Use of All Forms of Referendum by the Prohibition Movement | 13 |
Churches Lodges and Dry Organizing | 23 |
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