Challenging power and creating alternatives: integrationist, antisystemic and non-hegemonic approaches in Australian social movements

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Petray, Theresa;Pendergrast, Nick
Abstract

Social movements are often discussed as either reformist or revolutionary, or more often, as containing aspects of each of these approaches. However, whether a movement seeks integration into the existing system or it seeks to overthrow that system and replace it, both approaches are hegemonic in nature. That is, they focus on totalising power structures. In this paper, we explore another aspect of social movements: non-hegemonic approaches are those which prefigure alternatives at the local level. Non-hegemonic approaches are not oriented to power structures like states. Instead of actively resisting power, they bypass it or in some ways, ignore it, as they create new ways of being. This approach may be limited in scope, and is unlikely to challenge the existence of inequalities at broad scales, but they can point to real examples of alternatives to existing power structures.

Journal

Journal of Sociology

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Volume

54

ISBN/ISSN

1440-7833

Edition

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Issue

4

Pages Count

15

Location

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Publisher

Sage

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1177/1440783318756513