Social Movements & Trends, BRI-CLA
The rules and cultural norms of an organized society may not be written in stone, but often it does take a dedicated collective effort to disrupt and revise them. Throughout history, people have come together in group campaigns to effect change in the structure or values of a society. Movements such as abolitionism, the women's rights movement, the American civil rights movement, and the gay rights movement illustrate how common citizens can influence legislative action and modify cultural norms when they unite with the shared goal of bringing about a certain social change. Societal change can also take place naturally as a result of the accumulation of many smaller changes within a society. Large-scale trends such as industrialization, modernization, and urbanization provide examples of this more passive process of change.
Social Movements & Trends Encyclopedia Articles By Title
John Bright was a British reform politician and orator active in the early Victorian campaigns for free trade and......
Encyclopædia Britannica’s first biography of Nelson Mandela appeared in 1965, published in the Britannica Book......
British North America Act, the act of Parliament of the United Kingdom by which in 1867 three British colonies......
Guillaume Briçonnet was an influential Roman Catholic reformer, one of the most energetic personalities in the......
Jacob Bronowski was a Polish-born British mathematician and man of letters who eloquently presented the case for......
Paul Bronsart von Schellendorf was a soldier, military writer, and minister of war who helped reform the Prussian......
Henry Peter Brougham, 1st Baron Brougham and Vaux was a lawyer, British Whig Party politician, reformer, and lord......
John Cam Hobhouse, Baron Broughton was a British politician and literary personage known as the alleged coiner......
George Brown was a Canadian journalist and politician who was committed to federalism and to weakening the powers......
John Brown was a militant American abolitionist whose raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now......
Martha McClellan Brown was an American temperance leader who is believed to have drafted the call for the convention......
Baltasar Brum was a statesman noted for his reform of the educational and welfare systems in Uruguay and for his......
Andrey Sergeyevich Bubnov was a Bolshevik revolutionary and Communist Party and Soviet government official who......
Budi Utomo, the first Indonesian nationalist organization. It was founded on May 20, 1908, a day now designated......
Ferdinand-Édouard Buisson was a French educator who reorganized the French primary school system and who was awarded......
Nikolay Khristyanovich Bunge was a liberal Russian economist and statesman. As minister of finance (1881–87), he......
José Burgos was a Roman Catholic priest who advocated the reform of Spanish rule in the Philippines. His execution......
Daniel Burnham was an American architect and urban planner whose impact on the American city was substantial. He......
Burschenschaft, (German: “Youth Association”), student organization at the German universities that started as......
Henry Montagu Butler was the headmaster of Harrow School in England from 1859 to 1885, who reformed and modernized......
Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, 1st Baronet was a British philanthropist and politician who, in 1822, succeeded William......
Alphonse-Marie Bérenger was a French magistrate and parliamentarian, distinguished for his role in the reform of......
Simon Caboche was a French demagogic agitator whose raising of riots promoted an abortive reform of the royal administration.......
Amílcar Lopes Cabral was an agronomist, nationalist leader, and founder and secretary-general of the African Party......
George Cadbury was an English businessman and social reformer who, with his elder brother, Richard, took over their......
Cai Yuanpei was an educator and revolutionary who served as head of Peking University in Beijing from 1916 to 1926......
Joseph Caillaux was a French statesman who was an early supporter of a national income tax and whose opposition......
Helen Caldicott is an Australian-born American physician and activist whose advocacy focused on the medical and......
Calle 13, Puerto Rican popular music duo known for intelligent, poetic, and sharply pointed social and political......
Charles-Alexandre de Calonne was a French statesman whose efforts to reform the structure of his nation’s finance......
Bhikaiji Cama was an Indian political activist and advocate for women’s rights who had the unique distinction of......
Camisard, any of the Protestant militants of the Bas-Languedoc and Cévennes regions of southern France who, in......
Charles John Canning, Earl Canning was a statesman and governor-general of India during the Indian Mutiny of 1857.......
Saint Thomas de Cantelupe ; canonized 1320, feast day October 3) was a reformist, educator, English church prelate,......
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from......
capacity building, activities through which vested parties (individuals, organizations, communities, or nation-states)......
Gino, Marquess Capponi was a historian, statesman, and leader of liberalism in Tuscany who played an extremely......
Leo, count von Caprivi was a distinguished soldier who was Bismarck’s successor as Germany’s imperial chancellor......
Caracalla was a Roman emperor, ruling jointly with his father, Septimius Severus, from 198 to 211 and then alone......
Carbonari, in early 19th-century Italy, members of a secret society (the Carboneria) advocating liberal and patriotic......
Edward Cardwell, Viscount Cardwell was a British statesman who, as secretary of state for war (1868–74), was considered......
Stokely Carmichael was a West-Indian-born civil rights activist, leader of Black nationalism in the United States......
Mary Carpenter was a British philanthropist, social reformer, and founder of free schools for poor children, the......
carpetbagger, in the United States, a derogatory term for an individual from the North who relocated to the South......
José Miguel Carrera was an aristocratic leader in the early struggle for the independence of Chile and the first......
Rosalynn Carter was an American first lady (1977–81)—the wife of Jimmy Carter, 39th president of the United States—and......
John Cartwright was an advocate of radical reform of the British Parliament and of various constitutional changes......
Sir Roger Casement was a distinguished British public servant who was executed for treason and became one of the......
Antônio de Castro Alves was a Romantic poet whose sympathy for the Brazilian abolitionist cause won him the name......
Fidel Castro was the political leader of Cuba (1959–2008) who transformed his country into the first communist......
Raúl Castro is the head of state of Cuba (acting president of the Council of State and the Council of Ministers,......
Matthias Alexander Castrén was a Finnish nationalist and pioneer in the study of remote Arctic and Siberian Uralic......
Catherine the Great was a German-born empress of Russia (1762–96) who led her country into full participation in......
Instruction of Catherine the Great, (Aug. 10 [July 30, old style], 1767), in Russian history, document prepared......
Catholic Emancipation, in British history, the freedom from discrimination and civil disabilities granted to the......
Carrie Chapman Catt was an American feminist leader who led the women’s rights movement for more than 25 years,......
Carlo Cattaneo was an Italian publicist and intellectual whose writings significantly shaped the Risorgimento and......
Camillo Benso, count di Cavour was a Piedmontese statesman, a conservative whose exploitation of international......
Sir Edwin Chadwick was a lawyer and social reformer who devoted his life to sanitary reform in Britain. As secretary......
Joseph Chamberlain was a British businessman, social reformer, radical politician, and ardent imperialist. At the......
Chance the Rapper is an American rap and hip-hop singer and songwriter who burst on the music scene in the early......
Maria Weston Chapman was an American abolitionist who was the principal lieutenant of the radical antislavery leader......
Charles was the last of the great dukes of Burgundy (1467 to 1477). The son of Duke Philip III the Good of Burgundy,......
Charles Augustus was the Grossherzog (grand duke) of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, an enlightened ruler, and patron of......
Charles Frederick was the grand duke of Baden, a conscientious and liberal ruler who made his territories into......
Charles III was the king of Spain (1759–88) and king of Naples (as Charles VII, 1734–59), one of the “enlightened......
Charles VIII Knutsson was the king of Sweden (1448–57, 1464–65, 1467–70), who represented the interests of the......
Charles XI was the king of Sweden who expanded royal power at the expense of the higher nobility and the lower......
Charles XII was the king of Sweden (1697–1718), an absolute monarch who defended his country for 18 years during......
Archduke Charles was an Austrian archduke, field marshal, army reformer, and military theoretician who was one......
Charlotte was the grand duchess of Luxembourg from 1919 to 1964. Her constitutional reign saw the evolution of......
Chartism, British working-class movement for parliamentary reform named after the People’s Charter, a bill drafted......
Charwe was one of the major spiritual leaders of African resistance to white rule during the late 19th century......
chauvinism, excessive and unreasonable patriotism, similar to jingoism. The word is derived from the name of Nicolas......
Frederic John Napier Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford was an English colonial administrator and statesman who......
Mikhail Grigoryevich Chernyayev was a Pan-Slavist and Russian general noted for expanding the Russian Empire into......
Chicago literary renaissance, the flourishing of literary activity in Chicago during the period from approximately......
Boris Nikolayevich Chicherin was a liberal Russian historian and philosopher who argued vigorously for social change.......
Joseph Benedict Chifley was a statesman, prime minister of Australia from 1945 to 1949, and leader of the Australian......
Lydia Maria Child was an American author of antislavery works that had great influence in her time. Born into an......
Robert Erskine Childers was a writer and Irish nationalist, executed for his actions in support of the republican......
Chinese Communist Party (CCP), political party of China. Since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China......
Chipko movement, nonviolent social and ecological movement by rural villagers, particularly women, in India in......
Choe Je-u was the founder of the Donghak sect, a religion amalgamated of Buddhist, Daoist, Confucian, and even......
Choe Si-hyeong was the second leader of the Korean apocalyptic antiforeign Donghak (Cheondogyo) religion and helped......
Chouan, member of any of the bands of peasants, chiefly smugglers and dealers in contraband salt, who revolted......
Christian nationalism, ideology that seeks to create or maintain a legal fusion of Christian religion with a nation’s......
Christian VIII was the king of Denmark during the rise of the liberal opposition to absolutism in the first half......
Henry Christophe was a leader in the war of Haitian independence (1791–1804) and later president (1807–11) and......
Chu Van Tan was a military and political leader who played an important part in winning Vietnam’s independence......
Chulalongkorn was the king of Siam who avoided colonial domination and embarked upon far-reaching reforms. Chulalongkorn......
Church of Satan, counterculture group founded in the United States in the 1960s by Anton Szandor LaVey (1930–1997),......
Sir Richard Church was a British soldier and Philhellene, commander of the Greek forces during the War of Greek......
Revolt of the Ciompi, (1378), insurrection of the lower classes of Florence that briefly brought to power one of......
Civil Constitution of the Clergy, (July 12, 1790), during the French Revolution, an attempt to reorganize the Roman......
civil disobedience, the refusal to obey the demands or commands of a government or occupying power, without resorting......
civil religion, a public profession of faith that aims to inculcate political values and that prescribes dogma,......
Thomas Clarkson was an abolitionist, one of the first effective publicists of the English movement against the......
Claudius was a Roman emperor (41–54 ce), who extended Roman rule in North Africa and made Britain a province. The......
Appius Claudius Caecus was an outstanding statesman, legal expert, and author of early Rome who was one of the......