Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-0191-1 • Hardback • October 2002 • $144.00 • (£111.00)
978-0-7425-0192-8 • Paperback • October 2002 • $61.00 • (£47.00)
is professor and director of graduate studies at Suffolk University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 From Anti-Globalization to Global Justice: A Twenty-First-Century Movement
Part 3 Movements Based on Material Needs
Chapter 4 Unions and American Workers: Whither the Labor Movement?
Chapter 5 Mass-Membership Senior Interest Groups and the Politics of Aging
Chapter 6 Radical and Pragmatic: United Students against Sweatshops
Part 7 Movements Based on Postmaterialist Identities
Chapter 8 From Women's Survival to New Directions: WAND and Anti-Militarism
Chapter 9 The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power: A Brief Reconsideration
Chapter 10 The Disability Movement: Ubiquitous but Unknown
Part 11 Altruistic Movements
Chapter 12 Growing Green: Can It Happen Here?
Chapter 13 Human Rights Watch: American Liberal Values in the Global Arena
Chapter 14 The Peace Movement: Voices in the Wilderness
Promoting progressive movements for political, economic, and social changes, this book pursues the prospects for progressive political movements in the 21st century.
— Public Administration Review
John Berg has brought together an impressive array of activist scholars with an eye toward nurturing the blend of theory and practice necessary to promote progressive movements for political, economic and social change. The selections in this volume have the courage to value democracy. Taken together they offer valuable insight into the possibilities of rendering centripetal the centrifugal forces that often threaten to scatter political movements whose collective energy and vision are vital to the future of democracy itself.
— William F. Grover, Saint Michael's College
This is a superb volume. John Berg has assembled an impressive cast of authors to produce an exhaustive and timely survey of progressive political movements in the United States today. This will be essential reading for all students of social and political protest and for all those committed to progressive democratic politics.
— Colin Hay, University of Birmingham, U.K.
The chapters invoke a broad range of theoretical perspectives and employ a variety of forms of analysis. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Wondering what the so-called progressive groups have been doing in recent years? In this volume edited by John Berg, nine such organizations are nicely profiled by a variety of scholar-activists. It gave me a whole new appreciation for the world of 'leftist' activists and the causes they advocate in the new millennium. It is a must-read for all those who follow or study the role of groups in American politics.
— Ronald J. Hrebenar, University of Utah, author of Interest Group Politics in America University of Utah, author of Interest Group Politics in Amer
The case studies are informative, engaging, and follow a similar format, which is useful in making comparisons. This collection could work well in a social movements class.
— Contemporary Sociology
Ambitious.
— Logos: A Journal of Modern Society & Culture
A careful and informative volume on selected movements of the left, with an eye to updating the substantial work done on the movements of the 1960s and 70s. The essays in this collection are readable and accurate.
— Political Studies Review
Teamsters and Turtles is a useful, smooth-reading addition to any scholar's desk, and to any classroom text list. If radical (or at least progressive) practicality is a guide, this book is effective and appealing. . . . a lasting contribution that is unlikely to go out of print or become outdated in the near future.
— Ken Collier, University of Regina