ISBN-13: 9783565246144 / Angielski / Miękka / 264 str.
Social transformations rarely emerge from legislation alone. Behind every expansion of rights, every labor reform, and every challenge to institutional power lies decades of grassroots organizing, strategic mobilization, and sustained pressure from activists whose names seldom appear in political histories. From Chartist petitioners demanding voting rights to anti-apartheid networks coordinating international boycotts, from tenants' unions resisting evictions to environmental coalitions blocking dam construction, these movements redefined possibilities for collective action.This book examines how activists built organizations, framed demands, recruited participants, and navigated repression across two centuries of European social movements. Drawing on organizational archives, police surveillance files, personal correspondence, and movement publications, it analyzes the strategies, internal debates, and tactical innovations that enabled ordinary citizens to challenge entrenched power structures.Each chapter focuses on a specific movement, tracing its origins in localized grievances, examining how organizers developed shared analysis and collective identity, and analyzing tactics ranging from petition campaigns and strikes to civil disobedience and direct action. The narrative explores both successes and failures, examining why certain movements achieved legislative victories while others fragmented, how state repression shaped tactical choices, and what conditions enabled coalitions across class, gender, and ethnic divisions.
When British Suffragettes burned mailboxes and slashed paintings after forty years of peaceful petitioning achieved nothing, newspapers condemned their violence while ignoring institutional barriers.