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, South Africa: the Sanctions Report – documents and statistics, ed. Hanlon, Joseph, London, James Currey and Commonwealth Secretariat, 1990 , pp. 342

, People Power: An Eyewitness History: The Philippine Revolution of 1986, ed. Mercado, Monina, Manila and New York, J.B. Reuter and Writers and Readers Publishing, 1987 , pp. 320

Rubio, Luis; Davidow, Jeffrey, Mexico’s disputed election, 85 5 (September/October) 2006 , pp. 75-85

Argues that the July election represented a choice between continuing economic liberalization and a return to the past, but neither provided a solution to Mexico’s problems.

Kelliher, Diarmaid, Solidarity and Sexuality: Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners 1984-5, 77 1 (spring) 2014 , pp. 240-262

Among the many groups that sprang up to offer financial support and solidarity to the miners was the London- based Lesbian and Gays Support the Miners. This article charts support offered by LGSM and discusses wider implications for the movement on the left.

Pever, Stephen, The Rights of Indians and Tribes: The Basic ACLU Guide to Indian Tribal Rights, 1985 New York, Oxford University Press, 2012 , pp. 540

Rawlinson, Roger, Larzac: A Victory for Nonviolence, London, Quaker Peace and Service, 1983 , pp. 43

, Democracy and Civil Society in Eastern Europe, ed. Lewis, Paul, Basingstoke and New York, Macmillan and St. Martin's Press, 1992 , pp. 179

Mostly about prospects for civil society in post-communist context, but drawing on theory and practice of 1980s. Includes a chapter on the movement in Slovenia that led to it breaking away from Yugoslavia.

Belcevic, Nenad; Nenadic, Danijela, Serbia – Nonviolent struggle for democracy: The role of Otpor, In Howard Clark, People Power: Unarmed Resistance and Global Solidarity (A. 1.b. Strategic Theory, Dynamics, Methods and Movements) London, Pluto Press, 2009 , pp. 26-35

Former Otpor activists assess its role and criticism made of the group. Accompanied by critical reflections on ‘Serbia eight years after’ by Ivana Franovic (pp. 35-38).

, The Fall of Soeharto, ed. Forrester, Geoff; May, R.J., London, Hurst, 1998 , pp. 261

Produced by Australian National University Research Unit. Examines how and why Suharto was forced to step down.

See also Terence Lee, Military Cohesion and Regime Maintenance : Explaining the Role of the Military in 1989 China and 1998 Indonesia (C. II.1.c. Tiananmen, The Mass Protests of 1989) and Terence Lee, The Armed Forces and Transitions from Authoritarian Rule (E. II.8.a. Resisting Marcos, 1983-86) .

Crabtree, John, Patterns of Protest: Politics and Social Movements in Bolivia, London, Latin America Bureau, 2003 , pp. 117

Covers other protests over land, water and coca, but the final chapter ‘El Alto and the Gas Wars’ describes and analyses 2003, including brief discussion of women’s organizations and the role of radio.

, Mobilization, ed. Mobilization, , 17 4 (December) 2012 pp. smaller than 0

contains an overview by Charles Kurzman. ‘The Arab Spring Uncoiled’, and articles on Egypt, Iran, and Syria.

Siggins, Lorna, Once Upon a Time in the West: The Corrib Gas Controversy, Dublin, Transworld, 2010 , pp. 448

Account by Irish Times reporter of the ‘Shell to Sea’ struggle and civil disobedience by locals in Rossport County Mayo against gas pipeline, but with emphasis on planning process and legal issues.

Mundey, Jack, Green Bans and Beyond, Sydney NSW, Angus and Robertson, 1981

, Feminisms and Women’s Contemporary Movements, ed. Bull, Anna; Diamond, Hanna; Marsh, Rosalind, London, Macmillan, 2000 , pp. 286

Covers Europe in the 1990s, including essays on ‘Theorizing Feminism in Postcommunism’, ‘Something Unnatural: Attitudes to Feminism in Russia’, ‘New Mothers’ Campaigning Organization in Russia’, ‘”Its about Helping women to Believe in Themselves”: Grassroots Women’s Organizations in Contemporary Russian Society’ and ‘Women’s Discordant Voices in the Context of the 1998 Elections in the Ukraine’.

Lavalette, Michael; Mooney, Gerry, The Poll Tax Struggle in Britain: A Reply to Hoggett and Burn, 12 (Jan.) 1993 , pp. 96-108

Zeng, Jing, #MeToo as Connective Action: A Study of the Anti-Sexual Violence and Anti-Sexual Harassment Campaign on Chinese Social Media in 2018, 14 2 2020 , pp. 171-190

This study of China’s #MeToo draws upon the theory of connective actions to investigate how digital technologies influence the way in which feminist activism takes place. The author analysed over 36,000 online articles related to the campaign, and found 48 cases of sexual violence and harassment allegations. Time series analysis show that China's #MeToo campaign first emerged within educational institutions before gradually spreading to other sectors of society. Studying the ten most controversial cases, this paper identifies a series of counter-censorship strategies. The study of how the #MeToo movement in China evolved within an authoritarian context shows how connective actions traverse various platforms and cultural contexts. Methodologically, this study demonstrates how both qualitative and quantitative methods can be used to study connective actions on social media in China.

Spakowsky, Nicola, Socialist feminism in post-socialist China, 26 4 2018 , pp. 561-592

Discusses the new theoretical strand within Chinese feminism that has been forming since 2010 up to 2018, which, for lack of a programmatic label, the author calls “socialist feminism.”

Leadbeater, Maire, Peace, Power & Politics: How New Zealand Became Nuclear Free, Dunedin, Otago University Press, 2013 , pp. 344

Maire Leadbeater provides an insider’s view of the last 40 years of New Zealand’s peace movement and the fight for a nuclear free country. She was secretary and then spokeperson for Auckland’s Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and participated to the anti-nuclear weapons protests in the 1970s and 1980s. 

Barnes, andrew, Extricating the State: The Move to Competitive Capture in Post-Communist Bulgaria, 59 1 2007 , pp. 71-95

Barnes notes that, although academic analysis initially stressed the need to end extensive state control of the economy in post-Communist states, there was now increasing recognition that private economic interests can capture the state and prevent full-scale political reform. While no single economic group can control the political institutions, competing groups can struggle to gain leverage for their own economic benefit.

Wood, J.R.T., The Welensky Papers: A History of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, Durban, Graham Publishing, 1983 , pp. 1329

Account based on Welensky’s perspective, stressing top level negotiations and relations with successive British colonial secretaries.

Shakiya, Tsering, Trouble in Tibet, 51 2008 , pp. 5-26

Oquaye, Mike, Politics in Ghana, 1982-1992: Rawlings, Revolution and Populist Democracy, Accra, Tornado, 2004 , pp. 626

The author has been prominent in Ghanaian politics and a professor of political science at the University of Legon.

Paribhatra, Sukhumbhand, State and society in Thailand: How fragile the democracy?, 33 (September) 1993 , pp. 879-893

Bashirey, Hossein, The State and Revolution in Iran 1962-1982, London, Croom Helm, 1984 , pp. 203

Chapters 5-7 focus on the demonstrations.

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