contentious politics

{{Short description|Disruptive action oriented to change}}

Contentious politics is the use of disruptive techniques to make a political point, or to change government policy. Examples of such techniques are actions that disturb the normal activities of society such as demonstrations, general strike action, direct action, riot, terrorism, civil disobedience, and even revolution or insurrection. Social movements often engage in contentious politics. The concept distinguishes these forms of contention from the everyday acts of resistance explored by James C. Scott,{{Relevance inline|date=July 2023|reason=sure, but why does a reader care about his work? next editor should feel free to remove this unless they know a fix. The contrast with normative conflict is important though!}} interstate warfare, and forms of contention employed entirely within institutional settings, such as elections or sports. Historical sociologist Charles Tilly defines contentious politics as "interactions in which actors make claims bearing on someone else's interest, in which governments appear either as targets, initiators of claims, or third parties."{{Cite book |last=Tilly |first=Charles |url=http://archive.org/details/contentiouspolit0000till_b2q8 |title=Contentious politics |date=2015 |publisher=New York, NY : Oxford University Press |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-19-025505-3 |pages=7}}

Contentious politics has existed forever, but its form varies over time and space. For example, Tilly argues that the nature of contentious politics changed fairly dramatically with the birth of social movements in 18th-century Europe.

The concept of contentious politics was developed throughout the 1990s and into the 21st century by its most prominent scholars in the United States: Sidney Tarrow, Charles Tilly, and Doug McAdam. Until its development, the study of contentious politics was divided among a number of traditions each of which were concerned with the description and explanation of different contentious political phenomena, especially the social movement, the strike, and revolution. One of the primary goals of these three authors was to advance the explanation of these phenomena and other contentious politics under a single research agenda.McAdam, Doug, Sidney Tarrow, and Charles Tilly. Dynamics of Contention. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. There remains a significant plurality of agendas in addition to the one these three propose.

Contentious and disruptive political tactics may overlap with movements for social justice.{{cite journal |first=Clarissa Rile |last=Hayward |title=Responsibility and Ignorance: On Dismantling Structural Injustice |journal= Journal of Politics |volume=79 |issue=2 |pages=396–408 |date=19 January 2017 |doi=10.1086/688355|s2cid=151710302 }} For example, the political theorist Clarissa Rile Hayward has argued that theories, in particular that of Iris Marion Young, that situate the responsibility to correct large-scale injustices like institutional racism with the groups that benefit from oppressive institutions overlook the fact that people will rarely challenge institutions that benefit them. She argues that in certain cases contentious politics are the only practical resolution.

Prominent scholars

  • {{annotated link|Doug McAdam}}
  • {{annotated link|Charles Tilly}}
  • {{annotated link|Sidney Tarrow}}
  • {{annotated link|Theda Skocpol}}
  • {{annotated link|Mark Beissinger}}
  • {{annotated link|William Gamson}}
  • {{annotated link|Frances Fox Piven}}
  • {{annotated link|Richard Cloward}}
  • {{annotated link|James Jasper}}
  • {{annotated link|Donatella della Porta}}
  • {{annotated link|David A. Snow}}
  • {{annotated link|Deborah Gould}}
  • {{annotated link|Fancesca Polletta}}
  • {{annotated link|Dana R. Fisher}}
  • {{annotated link|Jack Goldstone}}
  • {{annotated link|Erica Chenoweth}}
  • {{annotated link|Gene Sharp}}
  • {{annotated link|Stathis Kalyvas}}
  • {{annotated link|Zeynep Tufekci}}
  • {{annotated link|David S. Meyer}}
  • {{annotated link|Javier Auyero}}
  • {{annotated link|Deborah Yashar}}
  • {{annotated link|Jeff Goodwin}}
  • {{annotated link|Sarah A. Soule}}
  • {{annotated link|Maria Stephan}}
  • {{annotated link|Kurt Schock}}
  • {{annotated link|Elisabeth Jean Wood}}
  • {{annotated link|Asef Bayat}}
  • {{annotated link|Omar Wasow}}
  • {{annotated link|Jackie Smith}}
  • {{annotated link|Kathleen Blee}}
  • {{annotated link|Hahrie Han}}

Prominent advocates

class="wikitable"

|+

!Left

!Liberal

!Right

*{{annotated link|Frantz Fanon}}

  • {{annotated link|Audre Lorde}}
  • {{annotated link|John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown}}
  • {{annotated link|Malcolm X}}
  • {{annotated link|Che Guevara}}
  • {{annotated link|Rosa Luxemburg}}
  • {{annotated link|Emma Goldman}}
  • {{annotated link|Huey P. Newton}}
  • {{annotated link|Subcomandante Marcos}}
  • {{annotated link|Saul Alinsky}}
  • {{annotated link|Vladimir Lenin}}
  • {{annotated link|Martin Luther King}}
  • {{annotated link|Mahatma Gandhi}}
  • {{annotated link|Nelson Mandela}}
  • {{annotated link|Henry David Thoreau}}
  • {{annotated link|Mao Zedong}}
  • {{annotated link|Angela Davis}}

|

  • {{annotated link|Samuel Adams}}
  • {{annotated link|Patrick Henry}}
  • {{annotated link|Andrei Sakharov}}
  • {{annotated link|Joshua Wong}}
  • {{annotated link|Thomas Jefferson}}
  • {{annotated link|John Hancock}}
  • {{annotated link|Thomas Paine}}
  • {{annotated link|Simón Bolívar}}
  • {{annotated link|Lajos Kossuth}}
  • {{annotated link|Giuseppe Garibaldi}}
  • {{annotated link|Giuseppe Mazzini}}
  • {{annotated link|José Rizal}}
  • {{annotated link|Václav Havel}}
  • {{annotated link|Liu Xiaobo}}
  • {{annotated link|Aung San Suu Kyi}}
  • {{annotated link|Alexei Navalny}}
  • {{annotated link|Srđa Popović (activist)|Srđa Popović}}

|

  • {{annotated link|Enrique Tarrio}}
  • {{annotated link|David Duke}}
  • {{annotated link|Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini}}
  • {{annotated link|Benito Mussolini}}
  • {{annotated link|Corneliu Z. Codreanu}}
  • {{annotated link|Oswald Mosley}}
  • {{annotated link|Stewart Rhodes}}
  • {{annotated link|Otoya Yamaguchi}}
  • {{annotated link|Ammon Bundy}}
  • {{annotated link|Gavin McInnes}}
  • {{annotated link|Alexander Dugin}}
  • {{annotated link|Carlos Castaño Gil}}
  • {{annotated link|Mullah Mohammed Omar}}
  • {{annotated link|Abubakar Shekau}}
  • {{annotated link|Yigal Amir}}
  • {{annotated link|Ze'ev Jabotinsky}}
  • {{annotated link|Itamar Ben-Gvir}}

Academic journals

Notes and references

{{reflist|2}}

Further reading

  • Gamson, William A. The Strategy of Social Protest, 2nd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing, 1990.
  • Goodwin, Jeff, and James M. Jasper, eds. Rethinking Social Movements: Structure, Meaning and Emotion. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004.
  • Jasper, James. The Art of Moral Protest: Culture, Biography, and Creativity in Social Movements. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997.
  • McAdam, Doug. Political Process and the Development of Black Insurgency, 1930–1970, 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999.
  • Melucci, Alberto. Challenging Codes: Collective Action in the Information Age. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
  • Piven, Frances Fox and Richard A Cloward. Poor People's Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail. New York: Vintage Books, 1979.
  • Tarrow, Sidney. Power in Movement: Social Movements and Contentious Politics, 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
  • Tilly, Charles. The Contentious French. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1986.
  • Tilly, Charles. Popular Contention in Great Britain, 1758–1834. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers, 1995b.

See also