Contents
Volume 3 issue 2, single file complete
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ISSN 2009-2431
Editorial
Feminism, women’s movements and women in movement. Sara Motta, Cristina Flesher Fominaya, Catherine Eschle and Laurence Cox (pp. 1 – 32)
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Articles: feminism, women’s movements and women in movement
Activist knowledges on the anti-globalization terrain: transnational feminisms at the World Social Forum. (P) Janet Conway (pp. 33 – 64)
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Framing across differences, building solidarities: lessons from women’s rights activism in transnational spaces. (P) Lyndi Hewitt (pp. 65 – 99)
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“We are flames not flowers”: a gendered reading of the social movement for justice in Bhopal. (P) Eurig Scandrett, Suroopa Mukherjee and the Bhopal Research Team (pp. 100 – 122)
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Can “the people” be feminists? Analysing the fate of feminist justice claims in populist grassroots movements in the United States (P) Akwugo Emejulu (pp. 123 – 151)
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A movement of their own? Voices of young feminist activists in the London Feminist Network (P) Finn Mackay (pp. 152 – 179)
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Bike Babes in Boyland: women cyclists’ pedagogical strategies in urban bicycle culture (action note) Melody L Hoffmann (pp. 180 – 186)
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Challenging perspectives: women, complementary and alternative medicine, and social change (P) Nina Nissen (pp. 187 – 212)
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Special section: feminist strategies for change
Why we need a feminist movement now. Sisters of Resistance (p. 213 and http://www.interfacejournal.net/2011/12/sisters-of-resistance-audio-file-download/)
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Some things we need for a feminist revolution. Nina Nijsten (pp. 214 – 225)
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Viejas tensiones, nuevos desafíos y futuros territorios feministas. Rosario González Arias (pp. 226 – 242)
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Independence vs interdependence. tiny aka Lisa Gray-Garcia (pp. 243 – 245)
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Feminist activist research and strategies from within the battered immigrants’ movement. Roberta Villalón (pp. 246 – 270)
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Listen to sex workers: support decriminalisation and anti-discrimination protections. Elena Jeffreys, Audry Autonomy, Jane Green, Christian Vega (Scarlet Alliance Australian Sex Workers Association) (pp. 271 – 287)
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Wise women in community: building on everyday radical feminism for social change. Jean Bridgeman (pp. 288 – 293)
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Performing unseen identities: a feminist strategy for radical communication. Jennifer Verson (pp. 294 – 302)
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Feminist love, feminist rage; or, Learning to listen. Jed Picksley, Jamie Heckert and Sara Motta (pp. 303 – 308)
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Statement on intimate partner violence within activist communities. Anarchist Feminists Nottingham (pp. 309 – 310)
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Articles: general
The capacities of the people versus a predominant, militarist, ethno-nationalist elite: democratisation in South Africa. (P) Kenneth Good (pp. 311 – 358)
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Transition, human rights and violence: rethinking a liberal political relationship in the African neo-colony. (P) Michael Neocosmos (pp. 359 – 399)
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Alternative journalism and the relationship between guerrillas and indigenous peoples in Latin America. (P) Roy Krøvel (pp. 400 – 424)
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Greenpeace: a (partly) annotated bibliography of English-language publications. (P) Tomás Mac Sheoin (pp. 425 – 447)
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“Everything we do is niche”: a roundtable on contemporary progressive publishing. (P) Anna Feigenbaum with Kheya Bag, Ken Barlow, Jakob Horstmann, David Shulman and Kika Sroka-Miller (pp. 448 – 458)
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Reviews
Single PDF (EN) (pp. 459 – 477)
Jennifer Earl and Katrina Kimport, Digitally enabled social change: activism in the Internet age. Piotr Konieczny
SV Ojas, Madhuresh Kumar, MJ Vijayan and Joe Athialy, Plural narratives from Narmada Valley. Tomás Mac Sheoin
Eurig Scandrett et al., Bhopal survivors speak: emergent voices from a people’s movement: Bhopal survivors’ movement study. Tomás Mac Sheoin
Hilary Wainwright, Reclaim the state: experiments in popular democracy. Laurence Cox
Call for papers volume 4 issue 2
For the global emancipation of labour: new movements and struggles around work, workers and precarity (pp. 478 – 481)
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List of editorial contacts
List of journal participants
Call for new participants
Articles marked (P) have been subject to double-blind peer review by one academic researcher and one movement practitioner. The other pieces have been edited by the authors in collaboration with an Interface editor.
Cover art
The cover image is a photograph of street art from the Egyptian revolution, this version at Saleh Selim Street, the island of Zamalek, Cairo. The photograph was taken on 23 October 2011 by independent journalist, photographer and blogger Hossam el-Hamalawy who entitled it “Grenade is what you are having for dinner”. His blog, and his other photographic works from the revolution, can be viewed at http://www.arabawy.org. We thank Hossam for his permission to use the image. The next edition of Interface on the Arab Spring, out in May 2012, will include an event analysis of efforts to archive art work and other materials related to the Egyptian Revolution.