Description

Book Synopsis

Leverage of the Weak enhances knowledge of movement emergence and offers the first systematic, multilayered comparisons across movements and nations in East Asia. Hwa-Jen Liu argues that examining material factors versus ideational factors is crucial to understanding the successes (or failures) of social movements.



Trade Review

"Theoretically sophisticated and methodologically meticulous, Hwa-Jen Liu’s book presents a fascinating comparative analysis of the labor and environmental movements in Taiwan and South Korea. Leverage of the Weak is one of the most interesting and significant books on East Asian development."—Hagen Koo, University of Hawai?i at Manoa


"A sober yet hopeful account of the struggle to humanize capitalism, this comparative study is a valuable resource for those interested in social movements and labor, sociology, and economic development."—CHOICE

"Because of its rich conceptual development, strong case study analysis and the generalisability of its findings, Leverage of the Weak is likely to appeal to a diverse academic audience."—Asian Studies Review

"Essential reading for anyone interested in the historical development of Taiwan and South Korea."—American Journal of Sociology

"Theoretically innovative, well-grounded in in-depth empirical research, and well written. Students who want to understand the rise social movements in East Asia, the relationship between labor and environmental activism, and the interactions between state actors and collective actors will learn a lot from this comparative study."—Mobilization

"Liu’s rigorous, provocative, and ground-breaking analysis of the mutually constitutive relationship between movement power and capitalist transformation should be required reading for anyone interested in the political possibilities and challenges of social movements in today’s global political economy."—Labour/Le Travail

"This is a detailed study on why and how social movements rise up during a nation’s development. Author Liu takes a comparative examination of two Northeast Asian countries, similar in many ways of political and economic development; modern industrialized Taiwan and South Korea."—Korean Quarterly



Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
Note to Readers
Abbreviations
Introduction: Strategic Comparison of Two Movements and Two Late Industrializers
1. The Power Bases of Labor and Environmental Movements
2. The Tangles of Movement Histories
3. The Emergence of Early-Riser Movements
4. Movement Legacy and Latecomer Movements
5. Labor and Environmental Trajectories
Conclusion: What Now?
Appendix: Notes on Methodology
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Leverage of the Weak

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    A Paperback / softback by Hwa-Jen Liu

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      View other formats and editions of Leverage of the Weak by Hwa-Jen Liu

      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 21/07/2015
      ISBN13: 9780816689521, 978-0816689521
      ISBN10: 0816689520

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Leverage of the Weak enhances knowledge of movement emergence and offers the first systematic, multilayered comparisons across movements and nations in East Asia. Hwa-Jen Liu argues that examining material factors versus ideational factors is crucial to understanding the successes (or failures) of social movements.



      Trade Review

      "Theoretically sophisticated and methodologically meticulous, Hwa-Jen Liu’s book presents a fascinating comparative analysis of the labor and environmental movements in Taiwan and South Korea. Leverage of the Weak is one of the most interesting and significant books on East Asian development."—Hagen Koo, University of Hawai?i at Manoa


      "A sober yet hopeful account of the struggle to humanize capitalism, this comparative study is a valuable resource for those interested in social movements and labor, sociology, and economic development."—CHOICE

      "Because of its rich conceptual development, strong case study analysis and the generalisability of its findings, Leverage of the Weak is likely to appeal to a diverse academic audience."—Asian Studies Review

      "Essential reading for anyone interested in the historical development of Taiwan and South Korea."—American Journal of Sociology

      "Theoretically innovative, well-grounded in in-depth empirical research, and well written. Students who want to understand the rise social movements in East Asia, the relationship between labor and environmental activism, and the interactions between state actors and collective actors will learn a lot from this comparative study."—Mobilization

      "Liu’s rigorous, provocative, and ground-breaking analysis of the mutually constitutive relationship between movement power and capitalist transformation should be required reading for anyone interested in the political possibilities and challenges of social movements in today’s global political economy."—Labour/Le Travail

      "This is a detailed study on why and how social movements rise up during a nation’s development. Author Liu takes a comparative examination of two Northeast Asian countries, similar in many ways of political and economic development; modern industrialized Taiwan and South Korea."—Korean Quarterly



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Note to Readers
      Abbreviations
      Introduction: Strategic Comparison of Two Movements and Two Late Industrializers
      1. The Power Bases of Labor and Environmental Movements
      2. The Tangles of Movement Histories
      3. The Emergence of Early-Riser Movements
      4. Movement Legacy and Latecomer Movements
      5. Labor and Environmental Trajectories
      Conclusion: What Now?
      Appendix: Notes on Methodology
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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