[movimenti.bicocca] Interface 6/2 now out: movement internat…

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著者: Alice M
日付:  
To: Laboratorio sulla partecipazione politica e associativa del Dipartimento di Sociologia e ricerca sociale dell'Universita' degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca
題目: [movimenti.bicocca] Interface 6/2 now out: movement internationalism(s)
*Interface: a journal for and about social movements *
*http://interfacejournal.net* <http://interfacejournal.net/>

*Volume six, issue two (November 2014):* *Movement internationalism(s)*

*http://www.interfacejournal.net/current/*
<http://www.interfacejournal.net/current/>



*- Apologies for any crossposting -*



Volume six, issue two of *Interface*, a peer-reviewed online journal
produced and refereed by social movement practitioners and engaged movement
researchers, is now out on the theme of “movement internationalism(s)”.*
Interface* is open-access (free), global and multilingual. Our overall aim
is to "learn from each other's struggles": to develop a dialogue between
practitioners and researchers, but also between different social movements,
intellectual traditions and national or regional contexts.

Like all issues of *Interface*, this issue is free and open-access. You can
download articles individually or a complete PDF of the issue (10.7 MB).
Please note that you can also subscribe (free) on the right-hand side of
the webpage to get email notification each time a new issue or call for
papers is out. This issue of *Interface* includes 403 pages and 28 pieces,
by authors writing from / about Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France,
Germany, India, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria,
Palestine, Poland, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Sweden, the UK and the USA
among other countries and in English and French.

Articles in this issue include:



*Themed pieces *

Cristina Flesher Fominaya,
*International solidarity in social movements *

David Landy, Hilary Darcy, José Gutiérrez,
*Exploring the problems of solidarity *

Peter Waterman,
*The international labour movement in, against and beyond, the globalized
and informatized cage of capitalism and bureaucracy*

Stéphane Le Queux,
*Alter-mondialisme, alter-syndicalisme? Revue et regard sur l’Australie*

Jean Somers,
*The dynamics of north-south relationships within transnational debt
campaigning*

Tomás Mac Sheoin,
*Internationalising the campaign for justice in Bhopal: balancing the
local, national and transnational*

David Landy,
*“We don’t get involved in the internal affairs of Palestinians”: Elisions
and tensions in North-South solidarity practices*

Sriram Ananth,
*Conceptualizing solidarity and realizing struggle: testing against the
Palestinian call for the boycott of Israel*

Priska Daphi,
*International solidarity in the global justice movement: coping with
national and sectoral affinities*

Melissa Schnyder,
*Migrant inclusion organization activity at the supranational level:
examining two forms of domestic political opportunity structures*

Mike Aiken, Gregorio Baremblitt, Nicola Bullard, Carine Clément, Ann
Deslandes, Sara Koopman, Sander Van Lanen,
*Activist experiences of solidarity work*

Ben Trott,
*A Spinozist sort of solidarity: from homo-nationalism to
queer-internationalism*



*General pieces*

Gloria Novović,
*Nonviolent struggle and its application in new social movements: an
interview with Srdja Popović*

Benedikte Zitouni,
*Planetary destruction, ecofeminists and transformative politics in the
early 1980s*

Institute for Precarious Consciousness,
*Anxiety, affective struggle and precarity consciousness-raising*

Rachel Kulick,
*What do you see that I cannot? Peer facilitations of difference and
conflict in the collective production of independent youth media*

Dominika V. Polanska,
*Cognitive dimension in cross-movement alliances: the case of squatting and
tenants’ movements in Warsaw*

Lindsey Lupo,
*Democratic uprisings and protest politics: a study of the Occupy San Diego
social movement*



*Reviews:*

§ Cristina Flesher Fominaya, *Social Movements and Globalization: How
Protests and Occupations are Changing the World*. Reviewed by Catherine
Eschle.

§ Brian Doherty and Timothy Doyle, *Environmentalism, Resistance and
Solidarity: The Politics of Friends of the Earth International*. Reviewed by
Eurig Scandrett.

§ Francis Dupuis-Déri, *Who’s Afraid of the Black Blocs? Anarchy in Action
Around the World.* Reviewed by Gary Roth.

§ Íde Corley, Helen Fallon, Laurence Cox, *Silence would be Treason: Last
Writings of Ken Saro-Wiwa*. Reviewed by Amanda Slevin.

§ B. Keniston, *Choosing to be Free: The Life Story of Rick Turner*.
Reviewed by Richard Pithouse.

§ Dan Hancox, *The Village against the World*. Reviewed by Kenneth Good.

§ Manfred Steger, James Goodman and Erin Wilson, *Justice Globalism:
**Ideology,
Crises, Policy*. Reviewed by Ariel Salleh.

§ Gwendolyn Hall, *A black communist in the freedom struggle* AND Joshua
Bloom & Waldo Martin, *Black against empire: **The History and Politics of
the Black Panther Party*. Reviewed by Mandisi Majavu.


A *call for papers* for volume 7 issue 2 (November 2015) of *Interface* is
now open, under the heading "Movements in post/socialisms", deadline May
1st 2015. Along with themed submissions we welcome pieces on any aspect of
social movement research and practice that fit within our mission statement
(http://www.interfacejournal.net/who-we-are/mission-statement/).

We can review and publish articles in Afrikaans, Arabic, Catalan, Czech,
Danish, English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Maltese, Norwegian,
Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish and Zulu. The website
has the full CFP and details on how to submit articles for this issue at
http://www.interfacejournal.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Issue-6_2-CFP-issue-71.pdf

The forthcoming issue of *Interface* (May 2015) will be on movement
practice(s).


*Please help us publicise this issue:*

§ *Forward this email*

§ *Link to the article on blogs and social media sites*

§ *Post details on twitter etc.: *http://interfacejournal.net
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