XII CHAPTER 15 Socilolgy Yaseer Hsslive
XII CHAPTER 15 Socilolgy Yaseer Hsslive
XII CHAPTER 15 Socilolgy Yaseer Hsslive
Chapter XV
Social Movements
• Social movements are collective efforts of section of people who want to bring desirable
changes in the society.
o Example:
– Abolition of Slavery – Anti-poverty
– Civil right movement – Disability movement
– Vote for women – 19th century social reform movements
– Environmental movement – Struggles against caste and gender
– Peace movement discrimination
– Animal rights – Indian Independence Struggle
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• The 1960s movement for the reorganisation of Indian states on the basis of language and the
recent Right to Information campaign are examples of reformist movements.
Revolutionary social movements
• It attempt to radically transform social relations, often by capturing state power.
o The Bolshevik revolution in Russia ,Naxalite movement in India
‘mutiny’ or ‘rebellion’
• A mutiny is an act of defiance against legitimate authority, i.e., the British rule.
• The old social movements functioned within the frame of political parties.
• Here the role of political parties was central.
o The Indian National Congress led the Indian National Movement.
o The Communist Party of China led the Chinese Revolution.
• The ‘new’ social movements were not about changing the distribution of power in society
but about quality-of-life issues such as having a clean environment.
• Today, the broader term of civil society is used to refer to both old social movements
represented by political parties and trade unions.
• And to new nongovernmental organisations, women’s groups, environmental groups and
tribal activists.
• Many of the new social movements are international in scope.
• Old and new movements are working together in new alliances such as the World Social
Forum that have been raising awareness about the hazards of globalisation.
Distinction between old and new social movements in the Indian context
• India has experienced a whole array of social movements involving women, peasants,
dalits, adivasis, and others.
• Gail Omvedt in her book Reinventing Revolutionpoints out that
o Social inequality and the unequal distribution of resources continue to be important
elements in these movements.
• New social movements are not just about ‘old’ issues of economic inequality. Nor are they
organised along class lines alone.
• Identity politics, cultural anxieties and aspirationsare essential elements in creating social
movements and occur in ways that are difficult to trace to class-based inequality.
• Often, these social movements unite participants across class boundaries.
o For instance, the women’s movement includes urban, middle-class feminists as well
as poor peasant women.
ECOLOGICAL MOVEMENTS
Bishnoi Movement
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• 1700s -Khejarli, Marwar region, Rajasthan state.
• Leaders: Amrita Devi along with Bishnoi villagers in Khejarli and surrounding villages.
• Aim: Save sacred trees from being cut down by the king’s soldiers for a new palace.
Chipko Movement
• 1973- In Chamoli district and later at Tehri-Garhwal district of Uttarakhand.
• Leaders: SundarlalBahuguna, Gaura Devi, Sudesha Devi, Bachni Devi
• Aim: The main objective was to protect the trees on the Himalayan slopes from the axes of
contractors of the forest.
• At the time of Independence we had the two most classical cases of peasant movements,
namely the
o Tebhaga movement (1946-7)
A struggle of sharecroppers in Bengal in North Bihar for two thirds share of their produce instead of
the customary half.
It had the support of the KisanSabha and the Communist Party of India (CPI).
o Telangana movement (1946-51).
Directed against the feudal conditions in the princely state of Hyderabad and was led by the CPI.
WORKERS’ MOVEMENTS
• Factory production began in India in the early part of the 1860s.
o These factories were, thus established in the port towns of Calcutta (Kolkata) and
Bombay (Mumbai). Later factories were also set up in Madras (Chennai).
• Tea plantations in Assam were established as early as 1839.
• In September and October 1917 there were around 30 recorded strikes.
o Jute workers in Calcutta struck work.
o In Madras, the workers of Buchingham and Carnatic Mills (Binny’s) struck work for
increased wages.
o Textile workers in Ahmedabad struck work for increase in wages by 50 per cent.
• The first trade union was established in April 1918 in Madras by B.P. Wadia, a social
worker and member of the Theosophical Society.
• Mahatma Gandhi founded the Textile Labour Association (TLA).
• In 1920 the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) was formed in Bombay.
o It was a broad-based organisation involving diverse ideologies.
o The main ideological groups were the communists led by S.A. Dange and M.N. Roy.
• The Indian National Congress chose to form another union called Indian National Trade
Union Congress (INTUC) in May 1947.
• Apart from the working class movement being divided on the lines of political parties at the
national level, regional parties too started to form their own unions from the late 1960s.
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CASTE BASED MOVEMENTS
• Sociologists, attempts to classify Dalit movements have led them to believe that they belong
to all the types, namely reformative, redemptive, revolutionary
o Anti-caste movement under the inspiration of JotibaPhule
o Non-Brahmin movements in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu under the leadership of Dr.
Ambedkar had characteristics of all types.
Prepared By: Yaseer P. K., WOVHSS, Muttil – For more Study materials… www.yaseerhsst.blogspot.com
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