Social Movement to Address Climate Change: Local Steps for Global Action
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sameness, in identity, 313–316, 320

San Antonio, Texas

The Alamo, 41–44

identity and myth in, 39–44

scientific revolutions, as new paradigms, 371

Seattle, Washington, 57–60

Sustainable Ballard, 57–59

self

as agent, 320–321, 324

construction of, 316–320

moral responsibility, 325–327

as victim, 320–321, 324

selfhood

in identity, 316

and moral responsibility, 326–327

SIU campaign

accountability, 169–170

altering signals of, 416–418

analysis as social movement, 219–231

assessing effect and scale, 395–398

challenges of scale, 398–399

as collective action, 166–167

as dialectical opposition, 163–164

ecologist response, 361–383

and environmental justice, 184–187

and environmentalism 2.0, 337–341

as image events, 283–284, 286–294

local as site of action, 412–413

and mainstream environmental movement, 184–187

modes of organizing, 174–175

movement as a network, 413–416

and new media, 261–263

opposing the status quo, 164–166

power, 169–170

rethinking strategy in, 408–419

role of regional organizing, 169–175

as a social movement, 214–216

spatial and temporal scope, 222–223, 232

strategic elements in, 411–419

symbolism in, 169

unresolved tensions, 400–408

SIU cookbook

access to, 264–266

art and, 56

to inform citizens, 266–269

and natural science, 363–366

new media and, 262–264

to shift to local power, 269–274

smart mobs, 354

social activism

new forms of, 337–356

open-source organization, 341–343, 349–351

and rhetoric of sustainability, 343–348

social constructionist, 216