1996
DOI: 10.1080/02732173.1996.9982134
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Constructing identity and oppositional knowledge: The framing practices of peace movement organizations during the Persian gulf war

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Cited by 55 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…This thing encompasses a perception of shared goals, interests, and characteristics; it acts as a 'shorthand reference point for insiders and outsiders that encapsulates key movement frames, issues, tactics, identities, ideologies, and orientations' (Flesher Fominaya, 2010, p. 397). Activists use identity in this way when they make decisions about emphasizing or downplaying group characteristics (Coy & Woehrle, 1996). I argue that activists also use collective identity as a product when they rule out potential strategies and tactics because they are in conflict with what the group represents.…”
Section: Collective Identity Previous Experience and Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This thing encompasses a perception of shared goals, interests, and characteristics; it acts as a 'shorthand reference point for insiders and outsiders that encapsulates key movement frames, issues, tactics, identities, ideologies, and orientations' (Flesher Fominaya, 2010, p. 397). Activists use identity in this way when they make decisions about emphasizing or downplaying group characteristics (Coy & Woehrle, 1996). I argue that activists also use collective identity as a product when they rule out potential strategies and tactics because they are in conflict with what the group represents.…”
Section: Collective Identity Previous Experience and Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The multiple audiences that observe an organization hold default expectations that help to form and define the organization's identity (Hsu and Hannan 2005, p. 476). Like other types of organizations, social movement organizations are tenaciously attentive to the ways that their identities are understood by the multiple audiences that observe them (Barakso 2010;Coy and Woehrle 1996;Engel 2007;Heaney and Rojas 2006;Lipsky 1968;Polletta and Jasper 2001). These audiences include members, supporters, volunteers, staff, other social movement organizations, foundations, government officials, mass media, and the public at large.…”
Section: Organizations With Hybrid Identitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the literature to date has focused on framing's role in the collective identity of social movements (Benford, 1993;Coles, 1999;Coy & Woehrle, 1996;Hunt, Benford, & Snow, 1994). However, I will argue here that it applies just as well to the collective identity of a political party or a nation and, more important, to individual identity building.…”
Section: Colesmentioning
confidence: 99%