Rape Protests in India and the Birth of a New Repertoire |
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Authors: | Soma Chaudhuri Sarah Fitzgerald |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology and School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USAchaudh30@msu.edu;3. School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA |
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Abstract: | The gang rape of a young physiotherapy student on a moving bus in December of 2012, in Delhi, India, brought forward a series of countrywide protests. These protests were unique compared with prior protests in India, leading to a need to re-examine the political importance of social movements in the subcontinent. Using data from 748 newspaper reports on the demonstrations that took place from December 2012 to April 2013, this paper examines the unique characteristics of the rape protests and their implications on the birth of a new repertoire in social movements. For the first time in Indian history, women's rights and violence against women occupied the forefront of national politics, and was no longer limited to agendas of feminists and women's groups. The protests were not led by a specific interest group, but were spontaneous and horizontal in nature, with participants from various social and political backgrounds. This paper argues that with the help of technology and new social media that a new repertoire of protests emerged: a horizontal, spontaneous, mass movement across interest groups. |
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Keywords: | Delhi rape protests spontaneous protests Indian women's movement new repertoire violence against women |
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