Fiche de révision : Understanding Social Movements and Political Change

📋 Course Outline

  1. Sujeto histórico: dimensión individual y social
  2. Estado y bien común en la vida política
  3. Ciudadanía activa y participación política
  4. Movimientos sociales: definición y actores
  5. Movimientos sociales en el siglo XX
  6. Movimientos sociales: ampliación en la segunda mitad
  7. Movimientos sociales en el siglo XXI

📖 1. Sujeto histórico: dimensión individual y social

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Sujeto histórico : A historical subject is a person or group that takes part actively or passively in a process and influences events through action, resistance, organization, or thought.
  • Acción, resistencia y organización : These are ways historical subjects influence events by acting, resisting, organizing, or shaping ideas during a historical process.
  • Actores individuales : Individual actors are single people such as leaders, citizens, or intellectuals who participate in historical processes.
  • Actores colectivos : Collective actors are groups such as peoples, social movements, communities, or social classes that participate in historical processes.
  • Conocimiento histórico : Historical knowledge is a product of ongoing constructions and rewritings that changes as history itself changes.

📝 Essential Points

  • Historical subjects can influence events both actively and passively through their action, resistance, organization, or thinking.
  • The course links the concept of historical subject to analyzing recent history through multiple dimensions.
  • Human groups evolve from family bands or clans toward more complex organizations over time.
  • States are presented as one modern form of social coexistence with specific characteristics.
  • Analyzing different historical perspectives helps interpret what historical subjects are.
  • Students are expected to evaluate their own condition as historical subjects for understanding history.

💡 Memory Hook

Subject = actor: individuals or groups that move history by action/resistance/organization/thought.

📖 2. Estado y bien común en la vida política

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Estado : The state is a political form of social organization with sovereign institutions that regulate life within a territory for a community of individuals.
  • Instituciones soberanas : Sovereign institutions are the state’s governing bodies with authority to regulate social life in a given territory.
  • Territorio nacional : A national territory is the geographic framework in which the state’s institutions regulate the community of individuals.
  • Bien común : The common good is the set of conditions that allow groups and individual persons to reach their own particular good.
  • Grupos intermedios : Intermediate groups are social groups between individuals and the state that also seek conditions to achieve their own good.

📝 Essential Points

  • The state is described as a modern historical form of coexistence with determined characteristics.
  • The state’s purpose is the common good, not the idea of everyone sharing one single real good.
  • The common good is defined as conditions that enable both intermediate groups and individual persons to pursue their particular good.
  • The course asks what happens when the state cannot guarantee the common good.
  • The state is tied to political life through its institutions that regulate community life.
  • The common good framing contrasts with treating “all” as one unified real unit.

💡 Memory Hook

Common good = conditions for each group/person, not one single “everyone’s” good.

📖 3. Ciudadanía activa y participación política

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Ciudadanía activa : Active citizenship is the stance of citizens who participate politically rather than remaining passive in public life.
  • Participación política : Political participation is citizens’ involvement in political processes that shape public decisions and outcomes.
  • Civil community : Civil community refers to the social space where citizens relate and organize around shared public life.

📝 Essential Points

  • Active citizenship is explicitly linked to political participation in the course’s political life framing.
  • The course connects citizenship to how people influence historical processes through action and organization.
  • Political participation is presented as a way citizens contribute to the development of events.
  • The unit’s focus on historical subjects supports viewing citizens as historical actors.
  • The course places citizenship within the broader question of how to understand recent history through different subjects.
  • The outline’s political dimension is treated as part of the individual and social analysis of historical subjects.

💡 Memory Hook

Active citizenship = participation that turns citizens into political actors.

📖 4. Movimientos sociales: definición y actores

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Movimiento social : A social movement is a non-formal group of individuals or organizations whose purpose is social change.
  • Cambio social : Social change is the transformation that social movements aim to achieve in society.
  • Movimientos no formales : Non-formal movements are groups that are not structured as formal institutions but still organize collective action.
  • Clases y sectores : Classes and sectors are social groupings such as workers, peasants, women, students, and neighbors that can form movement composition.
  • Grupos étnicos : Ethnic groups are collective identities that can be part of social movement composition.

📝 Essential Points

  • A social movement is defined by its purpose: social change.
  • The term is described as being used across the 20th century to cover movements in many contexts.
  • Movements can operate in cultural, social, political, economic, or personal spheres.
  • Social movement composition can include classes, sectors, or collectives such as workers, peasants, women, students, neighbors, and ethnic groups.
  • In Chile, during the 20th century, social movements are tied to struggles and demands of the working mass.
  • Those struggles are described as the basis for social movements becoming actors in national political life.

💡 Memory Hook

Movement social = non-formal collective aiming at change; can be cultural/political/economic/personal.

📖 5. Movimientos sociales en el siglo XX

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Masa trabajadora : The working mass is the main social group whose struggles and demands are linked to social movements in 20th-century Chile.
  • Centros mineros : Mining centers are places where early manifestations of the new social movement emerged.
  • Puertos y ciudades : Ports and cities are urban spaces where early social movement manifestations also appeared.
  • Artesanos y obreros : Artisans and workers are the protagonists of early Chilean social movement manifestations.
  • Mutuales : Mutual aid organizations are presented as the organizations linked to early social movement activity.

📝 Essential Points

  • In 20th-century Chile, social movements are directly related to workers’ struggles for better living and working conditions.
  • These struggles helped constitute social movements as actors in national political life.
  • Early manifestations appeared in mining centers, ports, and cities.
  • Artisans and workers are identified as protagonists of the early movement.
  • Mutual aid organizations are identified as the organizations behind early movement activity.
  • The course highlights that the wave of strikes was later halted by the massacre in Iquique.

💡 Memory Hook

20th-century Chile: workers’ demands → movements become political actors.

📖 6. Movimientos sociales: ampliación en la segunda mitad

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Mayor democratización social : Greater social democratization is the process that helps broaden social movements in the second half of the 20th century.
  • Auge de las clases medias : The rise of the middle classes is described as a factor that contributes to the expansion of social movements.
  • Movimiento campesino : The peasant movement is one of the social movements that emerged as part of the broader expansion in the second half of the 20th century.
  • Movimiento estudiantil : The student movement is one of the social movements that expanded in the second half of the 20th century.
  • Movimiento de mujeres : The women’s movement is one of the social movements that expanded in the second half of the 20th century.

📝 Essential Points

  • In the second half of the 20th century, social movements broaden due to greater social democratization.
  • The rise of the middle classes is also given as a reason for the expansion of social movements.
  • The course lists multiple movements that arise in this period.
  • The listed movements include peasant, student, women’s, Mapuche, and anti-dictatorship movements.
  • The anti-dictatorship movement is explicitly named among the expanded movements.
  • The expansion is framed as a shift toward a wider set of social actors.

💡 Memory Hook

Second half of XX: democratization + middle classes → more diverse movements.

📖 7. Movimientos sociales en el siglo XXI

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Movimiento Estudiantil de 2006 y 2011 : The student movement of 2006 and 2011 is presented as one of the most notable social movements in 21st-century Chile.
  • Movimiento por los Derechos Humanos : The human rights movement is described as continuing its work in the 21st century by demanding justice and denouncing abuses.
  • Movimiento ambientalista : The environmental movement is a social movement that demands stricter measures to protect the environment.
  • Movimiento feminista : The feminist movement is described as gaining renewed strength with demands on gender equality and related issues.
  • Movimiento por una Nueva Constitución : The movement for a new constitution is listed among the prominent 21st-century social movements in Chile.

📝 Essential Points

  • In the 21st century, Chile witnesses social movements reflecting demands and concerns from diverse sectors.
  • The student movement is linked to educational reform demands about quality, access, and tuition-free education.
  • The 2011 protests are described as massive and as leading to major changes in the Chilean education system.
  • The human rights movement demands justice for victims of dictatorship-era violations and also denounces more contemporary abuses.
  • Environmental mobilizations are linked to stricter protections against extractivist projects and pollution.
  • The feminist movement includes demands ranging from gender equality to decriminalization of abortion and fighting sexist violence.

💡 Memory Hook

21st century: education reforms (students) + justice (DDHH) + environment + feminism + inequality + new constitution.

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
1902Start of the period with around two hundred strikes (1902–1908).
1903Port strike of Valparaíso.
1905Meat strike in Santiago.
1907Massacre of the Santa María de Iquique school.
1908End of the period with around two hundred strikes (1902–1908).
2006Student movement of 2006.
2011Student movement of 2011 and massive 2011 protests.

📊 Synthesis Tables

Expansion of social movements by period

PeriodMain expansion factorTypical movements
20th centuryWorkers’ struggles for better living and working conditionsMining/ports/cities; artisans and workers; mutual aid organizations
Second half of 20th centuryGreater social democratization and rise of middle classesPeasant, student, women’s, Mapuche, anti-dictatorship movements
21st centuryDiverse sector demands across societyStudents (2006/2011), human rights, environmental, feminist, justice/inequality, new constitution

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing “common good” with “the good of everyone as one real unit” instead of conditions for groups and individuals.
  2. Treating social movements as formal institutions, since the definition stresses non-formal groups.
  3. Thinking historical subjects are only leaders or individuals, ignoring that collectives like movements and classes also count.
  4. Assuming the 20th-century Chilean social movement is only cultural or only political, since the course frames multiple spheres.
  5. Mixing up the 2011 student protests’ role (massive protests leading to education-system changes) with the general idea of student demands.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Define historical subject and distinguish individual actors from collective actors in historical processes.
  2. Explain how the course links historical knowledge to ongoing construction and rewriting as history changes.
  3. State the definition of the state and identify its sovereign institutions regulating life within a national territory.
  4. Describe the purpose of the state as the common good and characterize common good as conditions for intermediate groups and individuals.
  5. Connect active citizenship to political participation as a way citizens influence political life.
  6. Define a social movement and list the spheres where such movements can be situated (cultural, social, political, economic, personal).
  7. Identify typical social movement compositions named in the course (workers, peasants, women, students, neighbors, ethnic groups).
  8. Summarize 20th-century Chile’s social movement link to workers’ struggles and the role of mining centers, ports, cities, artisans/observers, and mutual aid organizations.
  9. Recall the period 1902–1908 as one with around two hundred strikes and name the examples: Valparaíso port strike (1903), meat strike in Santiago (1905), and Santa María de Iquique massacre (1907).
  10. Explain why social movements broaden in the second half of the 20th century (social democratization and rise of middle classes) and name the listed movements.
  11. Describe 21st-century Chile’s prominent movements and the specific course-linked themes: education reforms (students 2006/2011), human rights justice/denunciations, environmental protection, and feminist demands.

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Testez vos connaissances sur Understanding Social Movements and Political Change avec 10 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.

1. What best describes a historical subject in the study of history?

2. What is a 'sujeto histórico' in the context of understanding historical processes?

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Mémorisez les concepts clés de Understanding Social Movements and Political Change avec 9 flashcards interactives.

Sujeto histórico — definition?

Individuals or groups influencing history through action or thought.

Sujeto histórico: definition

Person or group influencing historical events.

State — purpose?

Regulate social life for the community’s common good.

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