Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Jun 2018

MICRO-MORAL WORLDS OF CONTENTIOUS POLITICS: A RECONCEPTUALIZATION OF RADICAL GROUPS AND THEIR INTERSECTIONS WITH ONE ANOTHER AND THE MAINSTREAM*

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Page Range: 219 – 236
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-23-3-219
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The emergence or resurgence of radical political groups invariably provokes a struggle between activists, academics, commentators, and policymakers over the set of terms that best correspond to the group in question. While such debates are an integral part of political practice, scrutinizing the claims made in these debates reveals significant limitations in standard strategies of description—most notably their inability to satisfactorily render either the essential cultural messiness and dynamism of contentious politics or the intersections between the so-called extreme and mainstream. We propose an alternative, albeit not mutually exclusive, strategy of description. This entails mapping what we call the micro-moral worlds of contentious politics—the patchwork of intersubjective contexts of belief and behavior through which activism takes place. We illustrate this with two empirical cases: The English Defence League in Britain and Republican Sinn Fein in Ireland.

Copyright: © 2018 Mobilization: An International Quarterly 2018

Contributor Notes

* Direct Correspondence to Dr. Joel Busher, Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Coventry University, Innovation Village Building No. 5, Cheetah Road, Coventry, CV1 2TL, UK, (joel.busher@coventry.ac.uk).

The authors would like to acknowledge the insightful comments by Cynthia Miller-Idriss on an earlier version of this article presented as a paper at the annual conference of the Council for European Studies in Philadelphia, April 2016. They would also like to acknowledge the valuable comments provided by three anonymous reviewers.

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