Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia
Social movements have brought change to various aspects of the society across the globe. Previous studies have focused on their rise and fall but not their continuity and change. This study investigates through the lens of the framing approach why and how a movement manages to continue. It is based...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-898972020-06-24T08:53:20Z Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia Rohman, Abdul Ang Peng Hwa Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication Social movements have brought change to various aspects of the society across the globe. Previous studies have focused on their rise and fall but not their continuity and change. This study investigates through the lens of the framing approach why and how a movement manages to continue. It is based on extensive interviews from 2015 to 2017 with 54 peace movement actors in Ambon, Indonesia, in which civil religious battles had left a community divided. Textual and social media data were also studied. The study found that the social movements’ actors’ ability to construct a new frame and reconcile friction among themselves was pivotal to reduce conflict, bring peace and sustain the movement. The finding suggests that framing is critical to continue a movement after it achieves its immediate goal and when political opportunities and resources are limited. This finding thus extends existing theory, first in proposing that frames may be dynamic not merely static and second in going beyond studies that have situated frames only when movements rise and peak to look at how frames operate to enable movements to continue. Doctor of Philosophy 2019-03-05T00:45:25Z 2019-12-06T17:36:09Z 2019-03-05T00:45:25Z 2019-12-06T17:36:09Z 2019 Thesis Rohman, A. (2019). Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/89897 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47753 10.32657/10220/47753 en 231 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication Rohman, Abdul Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
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Social movements have brought change to various aspects of the society across the globe. Previous studies have focused on their rise and fall but not their continuity and change. This study investigates through the lens of the framing approach why and how a movement manages to continue. It is based on extensive interviews from 2015 to 2017 with 54 peace movement actors in Ambon, Indonesia, in which civil religious battles had left a community divided. Textual and social media data were also studied. The study found that the social movements’ actors’ ability to construct a new frame and reconcile friction among themselves was pivotal to reduce conflict, bring peace and sustain the movement. The finding suggests that framing is critical to continue a movement after it achieves its immediate goal and when political opportunities and resources are limited. This finding thus extends existing theory, first in proposing that frames may be dynamic not merely static and second in going beyond studies that have situated frames only when movements rise and peak to look at how frames operate to enable movements to continue. |
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Ang Peng Hwa |
author_facet |
Ang Peng Hwa Rohman, Abdul |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Rohman, Abdul |
author_sort |
Rohman, Abdul |
title |
Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
title_short |
Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
title_full |
Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
title_fullStr |
Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in Indonesia |
title_sort |
framing, friction, and the continuity of social movements : the case of the ambonese peace movement in indonesia |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/89897 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47753 |
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1681059394305916928 |