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Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements
 
 

Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements [Paperback]

Francesca Polletta

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Polletta (sociology, Columbia) considers whether, as a process in decision-making, participatory democracy can be successful in effecting social change or is doomed to fail because it lacks organizational focus and an awareness that strategizing is essential. She closely analyzes the dynamics of participatory democracy in several movements in recent American history-organized labor, pacifist groups, the Civil Rights Movement, the New Left, and groups protesting against globalization. She postulates that the primary challenges of participatory democracy have been how to "coordinate actions and programs across de-centralized units" and how to choose a group interest from among competing individual interests. Drawing on extensive interviews with activists, Polletta focuses on distinct strengths that participatory democracy can provide to social and political action groups-the gathering and evaluation of information, the development of skills in "negotiating common agendas," and the ability to look beyond immediate conflict and focus on "future battles waged in electoral institutions." Although somewhat repetitive and densely written, this generally supportive critique of participatory democracy as a decision-making process challenges both proponents and opponents to re-think their deeply held beliefs. For academic and large public libraries.
Jack Forman, San Diego Mesa Coll. Lib., CA
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"This is an excellent study of activist politics in the United States over the past century. . . . Assiduously researched, impressively informed by a great number of thoughtful interviews with key members of American social movements, and deeply engaged with its subject matter, the book is likely to become a key text in the study of grassroots democracy in America."

(Kate Fullbrook Times Literary Supplement )

"Polletta''s interviews with scores of veteran activists has resulted in a deep portrayal of the ways in which activists tried to fuse moral principle and strategy. This portrayal challenges the common assumption that morality and strategy are incomparable, that those who aim at winning must compromise principle while those who insist on morality are destined to be ineffective. . . . Rather than dwell on trying to explain the decline of 60s movements, Polletta shows how participatory democracy has become the guiding framework for many of today''s activists."

(Richard Flacks Los Angeles Times )

"A wonderful reminder of sociology''s value for our multi-disciplinary fields, This is an important . . . work, worthy of the broadest possible audience."
(Peter J. Ling American Studies )

 

 “It is more than refreshing to read such a sensible discussion of the political merits of participatory democracy. Francesca Polletta takes issue with the common wisdom that organizations seeking political effectiveness must strategically prefer formalization and hierarchical decision-making. . . . She argues instead that there are significant political benefits in participatory structures. . . . Polletta does a splendid job of tracing the history of participatory democracy within social movements . . . beginning from pacifist groups and labor education movements before and after World War II and taking the story up to antiglobalization groups.”

(Myra Marx Ferree American Journal of Sociology )

“Polletta makes a persuasive and articulate case for the strategic benefits of participatory democracy. This book is rich in insights and chock-full of recommendations about the possibilities and pitfalls of participatory democracy. . . . She tackles difficult organizational issues that are essential to any social movement. <I>Freedom Is an Endless Meeting<I> is invaluable for scholars as well as activists.”
(Rebecca E. Klatch Social Forces )

“Polletta has produced a remarkable work of historical sociology that manages to probe the inner depths of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the New Left, and early radical feminism . . . in a way that enhances her comparative framework. . . . She provides the fullest theoretical; picture of participatory democracy, rich with nuance, ambiguity, and irony, that this reviewer has yet seen. . . . This wise book should be studied closely both by academics and by social change activists.”
(Stewart Burns Journal of American History )

“[Polletta’s] analysis provides invaluable insight into social movements that counteracted declining citizen participation and points toward the possibility of translating the fragile political gains of these groups into more solid understandings about democracy and political relationships.”
(Caitlin Halferty Democracy & Society )

“Polletta has written one of the most careful and nuanced studies of the social movements of the 1960s I have seen. . . . A significant contribution to the literature of the 1960s, on social movements generally, and on the issues activists in the present need to confront.”
(Paul C. Mishler Science & Society )

“Polletta’s study revitalizes one of the oldest debates in the study of social movements regarding organizational democracy. . . . Polletta’s study is especially important as a historically rich and theoretically nuanced analysis that will provoke much debate and generate renewed attention to the relationships between organizational practices, strategy, democracy, and the consequences of social movements.”
(Kenneth T. Andrews Mobilization )

2003 Outstanding Academic Title, Choice Magazine

(Choice ) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Conventional wisdom has it that participatory democracy is worthy in principle but unwieldy in practice. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent overview of participatory democracy in social movements, Mar 6 2007
By varmint - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Freedom Is an Endless Meeting: Democracy in American Social Movements (Paperback)
This is simply one of my favorite books, all around, even including works of fiction. It's well written, well researched, insightful and relevant for activists in the trenches. The well written and relevant parts are, sadly, often not true of academic work on social movements. As for the well researched part, Polletta did an astounding amount of archival research and interviews with activists to write this book. What emerges is a fascinating history of how twentieth-century US progressive social movements have tried to implement participatory democracy in their own organizations. It is a chronicle of failed experiments, gradually historical learning and increasing success.

By reading this book, we get to see what has worked and what has failed. Polletta makes two main contributions in this book. First, she rebutts those who argue that participatory democracy is a nice ideal, but impractical--that top-down leadership is a more efficient form of organization. On the contrary, says Polletta, participatory democracy promotes 1) solidarity in groups, because everyone feels included in the decision-making process and thus more committed to any plan of action; 2) innovation, as more people take part in the back and forth as new ideas are developed; and 3) personal development, as active participation in decision-making lets more people develop new skills, including leadership skills.

The other major point Polletta makes is that it has been difficult for movement organizations to successfully implement participatory democracy because we have so few models of such interaction in mainstream society. Therefore, we often fall back on patterns of interaction we are familiar with--religious fellowship, friendship and the teacher-student relationship. In certain circumstances, these can work for a while, but historically they have always lead to trouble. We need to develop new models for relating to each other to make participatory democracy work. On the practical level, Polletta says that the contemporary community organizing and global justice movements have both developed good practices that seem to have solved many past historical problems--though in very different ways. (This is also not to say that they have solved all problems--new challenges certainly lie ahead.) On a more abstract level, Polletta points to the Latin-American ideal of the compañero/a, a relationship that is close, but based on the common bonds of political struggle, not modeled on friendship or kinship or some other familiar form.

All in all, this is an excellent, though-provoking, inspiring book.
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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