Social Movements, Competing Crises and Effective Action

Jan 16, 2012 | 0 comments

The MAHB  held a Symposium titled “Social Movements, Competing Crises and Effective Action” on December 7, 2011 at Stanford campus. Doug McAdam, Professor of Sociology and Director of Urban Studies at Stanford University (with affiliations in American Studies, Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, and the Interdisciplinary Program in Environmental  Research) facilitated the discussion.
The goal was to explore how academics and civil society as a whole might shift concerns for  humanity into high impact action; given the competing crises of financial instability, biosphere disruption, social/global equity, war, nuclear proliferation, environmental degradation, and the list goes on. Is there a way to bring these threats into one coherent compelling call to action? Is there a unique role for an alliance of social scientists/humanities scholars and natural scientists? Should MAHB reframe some fundamental assumptions?
Below is the hour long video of the discussion attended by MAHB affiliated professors, scholars, and students:

MAHB | Doug McAdam – December 7, 2011 from Cyperus Media.com on Vimeo.

If the embedded video above is not working on your computer click HERE.

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