Examinando por Materia "Movimiento social"
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Ítem Incidencia y participación del Movimiento Social Afrodescendiente de Medellín - MOSAM, en la formulación e implementación del Plan Municipal Afrodescendiente 2020-2029 (periodo 2017-2023)(Universidad EAFIT, 2023) Rivas Garcés, Alejandro; Vieira Silva, Juan GuillermoÍtem El potencial contencioso del estilo, la moda y el vestuario en los movimientos sociales : revisión de literatura(Universidad EAFIT, 2020) Rojas Saldarriaga, Laura; Arango Restrepo, María RocíoÍtem Retos en la comunicación política de organizaciones de mujeres y feministas en Colombia(Universidad EAFIT, 2020) Beltrán Pineda, Angélica Tatiana; Juárez Rodríguez, JavierThis research seeks to explain the challenges of Colombian women's and feminist organisations in terms of their communication effectiveness in the citizenry, from a critical and feminist paradigm, and from a qualitative methodology taking as a main tool semi-structured interviews applied to eight women, directors and coordinators of six regional and national organizations recognized in Colombia, diverse in age, ethnicity, ideological current, territory and sexual orientation. The main findings are the use of media and communication tools according to the age and territory of influence of the organizations, as well as strategic challenges in communication, in the construction of discourse and use of language, and a context of insecurity for women human rights defenders that negatively impacts the communication of social organizations.Ítem El reverso del sujeto sociológico(Universidad EAFIT, 2003) Gutiérrez Vera, Daniel; Universidad EAFITÍtem Social Mobilization and Deliberation The Collective Action Frame as the Conclusion of a Deliberative Dialogue(Universidad EAFIT, 2020-06-24) Mejía Saldarriaga, Daniel; Rocío Arango, María; Universidad EAFITThe purpose of this paper is to explain the collective action of social movement organizations by means of framing processes that are understood as the result of a deliberative dialogue. To this end, the text is divided into four sections. The first section introduces the framing theory of social movement studies; the second section examines different explanations concerning the creation of a collective action framework. The third section considers the characterization of Walton and Krabbe’s deliberative dialogue (2017) as well as Fairclough and Fairclough’s practical reasoning scheme (2012) for the purpose of tracing a relationship between collective action framing and such dialogues. The last section concludes that the collective action of activists involved in the framing processes can be understood as a deliberate collective action.