This book examines how micro, contextual issues inspire collective social action forms against everday situations of crises and crimes through an inter-disciplinary, ethnograhic and comparative research conducted among Bishnois and Indian South Africans.
This book examines how micro, contextual issues inspire collective social action forms against everday situations of crises and crimes through an inter-disciplinary, ethnograhic and comparative research conducted among Bishnois and Indian South Africans.
Exploring the role of the publics that practice and mobilise their social movement imaginations, the work delves into peoples' ability to move beyond their immediate contexts and politicize multiple social spaces and discursive spheres around them to project their causes. Mapping an anti-poaching movement spearheaded by the Bishnois of western Rajasthan in India and, an anti-substance abuse movement led by the historical Indian diaspora of South Africa, the author argues that such contemporray forms of organised social action replete with alternative frames, symbols and repertoires possess key requisites to be understood as the, 'Newer Social Movements' of the Global South.
The volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of social and protest movements, migration and diaspora studies, political science, social anthropology, and ethnography.
1. Introduction and
Chapterisation
2. Micro Social Movements (MSMs) As
Newer Social Movements of the South and the Mobilisation of a Shared
Imagination
3. The Anthropology of Protest: Of Layered Discursiveness and
Twin Imaginations
4. Anti-Poaching Movement of the BTF in Western Rajasthan:
A Layered Discursive Formation
5. Anti-Substance Abuse Movement of the ADF In
Durban: A Layered Discursive Formation
6. Summaries and a Comparative
Analysis of Two Micro Social Movements (MSMs)
Bobby Luthra Sinha holds a PhD in Social Anthropology and Political Science from the University of Basel Switzerland and a Post-Doc from the University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. An independent author, lead researcher, editor, and advisor to several research bodies, NGOs, and multi-media outlets, she is the Deputy Director of the Centre for Asian, African and Latin American Studies (CAALAS) at the ISS, Delhi, and Co-Chair of the Migration Commission for the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnographic Sciences (IUAES).
Luthra Sinha undertakes research and advocacy work on the issue of environmental and human rights of tribals, women, migrants, and diasporas with a strong focus on SDGs and community resilience. Her ethnographic documentaries and research on the Bishnois of Western Rajasthan in India are available at:
https://www.sahapedia.org/bishnois-of-western-rajasthan-culture-of-nature-conservation