Protest, Agitation, Social Movements, Collective action, Revolution: Quick Revision Module

Block 1: Protest, Agitation, Social Movements & Collective Action

This block covers (1) key distinctions among protest, agitation, collective action; (2) classical foundations (Marx, Weber, Durkheim, Le Bon, Blumer); (3) strain & relative-deprivation theories (Smelser, Gurr, Davies); and (4) resource mobilization (McCarthy & Zald). Block 2 will continue with political process, new social movements, collective action models, revolutions, and Indian movements.

1) Introduction — Protest, Agitation & Collective Action

TermCore MeaningMechanismOutcome FocusExample (UPSC-style)
ProtestExpressed dissent against authority/policyMarches, strikes, sit-ins, petitions, boycottsVisibility, pressure, agenda-entryUniversity fee protests; labour strikes
AgitationSustained, organized effort to arouse supportCampaigning, speeches, symbolic actsMobilization, framing, recruitmentAnti-corruption mobilisation
Collective ActionCoordinated action by group to pursue common goalsCoordination, selective incentives, leadershipOvercoming free-rider issues; achieving changeCommunity sanitation drives; union bargaining
Social MovementSustained, networked, organized challenge to authority/cultureMobilization, resources, political opportunities, framesPolicy change + cultural/identity shiftsEnvironmental, feminist, Dalit movements
Flow — From Grievance to Movement
Grievance
inequality/violation
Mobilizing Structures
associations, networks
Framing
diagnosis, prognosis, call-to-action
Repertoires
protest, litigation, lobbying
Outcomes
policy, culture, identity

2) Classical Foundations — Marx, Weber, Durkheim, Le Bon, Blumer

2.1 Karl Marx — Class Conflict & Revolutionary Praxis

  • Structure: Exploitation in the mode of production generates antagonistic classes (bourgeoisie vs proletariat).
  • Process: From class-in-itself (objective position) to class-for-itself (conscious, organized).
  • Mechanisms: crises of accumulation, political organization (party), ideology (hegemony vs counter-hegemony).
  • Outcome: transformative collective action (revolution/major reforms).
Use in answers: Pair Marx with Gramsci (consent/hegemony) and Althusser (ISAs) to explain why grievances need organization + ideology to become movements.

2.2 Max Weber — Legitimation, Leadership & Repertoires

  • Authority Types: traditional, charismatic, legal-rational — movements often arise around charismatic leaders and challenge traditional/legal orders.
  • Party/Status/Classes: Movements mobilize across these orders using strategic repertoires (organization, resources, ideas).
  • Routinization of Charisma: successful movements institutionalize into parties/unions/NGOs; risks of bureaucratization.

2.3 Emile Durkheim — Collective Effervescence & Solidarity

  • Rapid social change → anomie; movements can re-anchor norms/solidarity.
  • Ritual gatherings create collective effervescence — affective glue that sustains action.
  • Movements re-moralize society by articulating new norms (e.g., rights, equality, environment).

2.4 Crowd Psychology — Le Bon; Symbolic Interaction — Blumer

  • Gustave Le Bon: early crowd theory — anonymity, contagion; criticized for determinism but useful for analyzing crowd affect.
  • Herbert Blumer: collective behavior as emergent definition of the situation; symbolic interaction builds shared meanings → coordinated action.
ThinkerKey IdeaMechanismWhat to Write
MarxClass conflict → movementExploitation, organization, ideologyPair with Gramsci/Althusser for consent
WeberLeadership, legitimacy, repertoiresCharisma → routinizationExplain rise/decline of movements
DurkheimSolidarity & ritual energyCollective effervescenceWhy gatherings matter
Le Bon/BlumerCrowd affect; emergent meaningContagion; interactional framingMicro-foundations of protest

3) Strain & Relative-Deprivation Theories — Smelser, Gurr, Davies

These approaches foreground grievances and perceived injustice as triggers, but also specify structural conditions that convert discontent into collective episodes.

3.1 Neil Smelser — Value-Added Theory (Structural Strain)

Collective behavior results when six conditions “add value” to each other:

Vertical Flow — Smelser’s Six Determinants
1. Structural Conduciveness
(channels for action)
2. Structural Strain
(conflict, anomie)
3. Generalized Belief
(shared diagnosis & target)
4. Precipitating Factors
(spark events)
5. Mobilization
(leaders, resources)
6. Social Control
(police, elite response)
  • Insight: Authorities’ response (tolerance/repression) shapes escalation or de-escalation.
  • Critique: Too episodic; underplays organization and political opportunities.

3.2 Ted Robert Gurr — Relative Deprivation

  • Core: Gap between value expectations and value capabilities → anger → violence/protest.
  • Types: decremental, aspirational, progressive deprivation.
  • Use: explains why discontent rises, but needs how (organization/opportunities) to predict outcomes.

3.3 James C. Davies — J-Curve

  • Hypothesis: Revolt occurs when a period of rising expectations is followed by sharp reversal — the J-curve.
  • Example logic: liberalization → hopes rise → sudden crisis/shock → frustration → mass protest.
TheoryWhat It Explains WellLimitsCombine With
SmelserPhasing of protest episodesWeak on sustained organizationResource Mobilization; Political Process
GurrPsychology of grievance/angerDoesn’t predict successMobilization & opportunities
DaviesTrigger conditions for revoltMacro pattern, not micro mechanicsLeadership, networks, state response

4) Resource Mobilization Theory — McCarthy & Zald

Resource Mobilization (RM) shifts focus from grievances (pervasive) to organizational capacity and resources (scarce): money, time, skills, networks, media access, legitimacy. Movements act like strategic organizations, not mere outbursts.

4.1 Core Propositions

  • SMOs & SMIs: Social Movement Organizations operate within broader Social Movement Industries (issue domains).
  • Entrepreneurs: leaders as movement entrepreneurs who package issues, recruit, and fundraise.
  • Selective Incentives: to overcome free-riding (material, solidary, purposive benefits).
  • External Support: patrons, foundations, parties, media can supply crucial resources (“resource flows”).
Flow — How Resources Become Power
Inputs
money, time, skills
Organization
SMOs, leadership
Repertoires
protest, lobbying, litigation
Alliances
media, NGOs, parties
Outcomes
policy/culture change

4.2 Strengths & Critiques

StrengthWhy It HelpsCritiqueAnswer Strategy
Explains success varianceGrievances are common; resources differCan underplay emotions/identityAdd Melucci (identity) & Habermas (public sphere)
Organizational realismSMOs, funding, professionals matter“Professionalization” may sideline grassrootsDiscuss movement–NGO tensions
Alliances & networksShows role of media, parties, donorsRisk of co-optationBring in Selznick (co-optation) & Michels (oligarchy)
Bridge to Block 2: RM sets the stage for Political Process Theory (opportunity structures, Tilly/McAdam) and New Social Movements (identity, culture, networks). We’ll cover these next with Indian movement cases and UPSC-ready toolkits.
Click on Page Number 2 Below for Block 2
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