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This book demonstrates how preserving ideology and relationships
with other activists affords social movements to persist over time
amid limited resources and political opportunities in Southeast
Asia. Examining two peace movements in Indonesia - the largest
democratic country in Southeast Asia - to illuminate discontinuity,
continuity, and change in social movements, the author uses a
cultural approach to understanding why social movements persist. He
argues that the activists' memory, relationship with others,
collective identity, and emotion are reasons for social movements
to ascend and peak. This is a direct response to the argument that
the availability of resources and political opportunities is the
main ingredient for any social movements to rise. While having
different fates, the two movements studied arose in the midst of
violence between Christian and Muslim communities in Ambon,
Indonesia: The Kopi Badati movement and Filterinfo. The book
extends the applicability of the cultural approach in explaining
why social movements discontinue, continue, and change over time,
without discounting the importance of available resources and
political opportunities. Addressing a gap in the existing social
movement studies, the book explains why a social movement disbands
and why the other manages to continue and change after achieving
its immediate goal. It will be of interest to academics in the
fields of Asian studies, (new)-media and communications, civil
society, and international development.
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