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How Civic Action Works - Fighting for Housing in Los Angeles (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,220
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How Civic Action Works - Fighting for Housing in Los Angeles (Hardcover)
Series: Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The ways that social advocates organize to fight unaffordable
housing and homelessness in Los Angeles, illuminated by a new
conceptual framework for studying collective action How Civic
Action Works renews the tradition of inquiry into collective,
social problem solving. Paul Lichterman follows grassroots
activists, nonprofit organization staff, and community service
volunteers in three coalitions and twelve organizations in Los
Angeles as they campaign for affordable housing, develop new
housing, or address homelessness. Lichterman shows that to
understand how social advocates build their campaigns, craft
claims, and choose goals, we need to move beyond well-established
thinking about what is strategic. Lichterman presents a
pragmatist-inspired sociological framework that illuminates core
tasks of social problem solving, both contentious and
noncontentious, by grassroots and professional advocates alike. He
reveals that advocates' distinct styles of collective action
produce different understandings of what is strategic, and generate
different dilemmas for advocates because each style accommodates
varying social and institutional pressures. We see, too, how
patterns of interaction create a cultural filter that welcomes some
claims about housing problems while subordinating or delegitimating
others. These cultural patterns help solve conceptual and practical
puzzles, such as why coalitions fragment when members agree on many
things, and what makes advocacy campaigns separate housing from
homelessness or affordability from environmental sustainability.
Lichterman concludes by turning this action-centered framework
toward improving dialogue between social advocates and researchers.
Using extensive ethnography enriched by archival evidence, How
Civic Action Works explains how advocates meet the relational and
rhetorical challenges of collective action.
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