Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns

This paper identifies two blind spots in the literature on Transnational Advocacy Campaigns TACs): an overemphasis on the external political impacts of TACs and the lack of conceptual clarity on key analytical constructs such as mobilization and representation. These problems leave the internal dyna...

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Main Author: Balasubramanian, Priyanjali
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12703
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-127032013-06-05T04:17:45ZMapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaignsBalasubramanian, PriyanjaliThis paper identifies two blind spots in the literature on Transnational Advocacy Campaigns TACs): an overemphasis on the external political impacts of TACs and the lack of conceptual clarity on key analytical constructs such as mobilization and representation. These problems leave the internal dynamics of TACs under-theorized and prevent scholars from categorizing TAC constituencies beyond geographic and class-based dichotomies (for example: North-South, core-periphery). To address these limitations, the paper presents a typology that distinguishes TAC constituencies based on observed levels of mobilization and representation. Using two online TACs as case-studies, the paper demonstrates the feasibility of the typology and challenges the prevailing assumption in the TAC literature, which conflates the quantity of mobilization with the quality of representation. Overall, the paper pursues an integrated research approach that draws on the comparative method and international relations scholarship in its examination of advocacy in contemporary transnational politics.University of British Columbia2009-09-11T13:54:36Z2009-09-11T13:54:36Z20092009-09-11T13:54:36Z2009-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertation194866 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/12703eng
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description This paper identifies two blind spots in the literature on Transnational Advocacy Campaigns TACs): an overemphasis on the external political impacts of TACs and the lack of conceptual clarity on key analytical constructs such as mobilization and representation. These problems leave the internal dynamics of TACs under-theorized and prevent scholars from categorizing TAC constituencies beyond geographic and class-based dichotomies (for example: North-South, core-periphery). To address these limitations, the paper presents a typology that distinguishes TAC constituencies based on observed levels of mobilization and representation. Using two online TACs as case-studies, the paper demonstrates the feasibility of the typology and challenges the prevailing assumption in the TAC literature, which conflates the quantity of mobilization with the quality of representation. Overall, the paper pursues an integrated research approach that draws on the comparative method and international relations scholarship in its examination of advocacy in contemporary transnational politics.
author Balasubramanian, Priyanjali
spellingShingle Balasubramanian, Priyanjali
Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
author_facet Balasubramanian, Priyanjali
author_sort Balasubramanian, Priyanjali
title Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
title_short Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
title_full Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
title_fullStr Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
title_full_unstemmed Mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
title_sort mapping contested terrain : mobilization and representation in transnational advocacy campaigns
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12703
work_keys_str_mv AT balasubramanianpriyanjali mappingcontestedterrainmobilizationandrepresentationintransnationaladvocacycampaigns
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