This review examines the complex interplay among social movements, organizations, and law. Although the sociological literature has recently been attentive to each pair of two of these social arenas—that is, to social movements and organizations, to organizations and law, and to law and social movements—there has been no effort to theorize the relation- ship among all three of them. We review the literature on each pair of institutions and then suggest ways in which insights about the omitted institution might inform extant work. Finally, we offer a new frame- work for examining socialmovements, organizations, and law together. Envisioning the three social arenas as overlapping andmutually consti- tutive social fields,we suggest that institutional change may occurwhen exogenous shocks produce contention and settlement in adjacent fields or when endogenous motion occurs as ideas within one field gradually influence practices in adjacent fields. 653
CITATION STYLE
Lauren B., E., Gwendolyn, L., & Doug, M. (2010). On law, organizations, and social movements. Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 6, 653. Retrieved from http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-102209-152842
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