Jen Angel: Becoming the Media: A Critical History Of Clamor Magazine (2008)
Filed under pamphlet | Tags: · activism, anarchism, digital divide, independent media, magazine, media, media activism, politics

Clamor Magazine was a movement publication that existed between 2000 and 2006, covering radical politics, culture, and activism. Clamor published 38 issues and featured over 1,000 different writers and artists. The mission statement was:
Clamor is a quarterly print magazine and online community of radical thought, art, and action. An iconoclast among its peers, Clamor is an unabashed celebration of self-determination, creativity, and shit-stirring. Clamor publishes content of, by, for, and with marginalized communities. From the kitchen table to shop floor, the barrio to the playground, the barbershop to the student center, it’s old school meets new school in a battle for a better tomorrow. Clamor is a do-it-yourself guide to everyday revolution.
This analysis is presented as a case study on how movement projects and organizations deal with vital but rarely discussed issues such as management, sustainability, ownership, structure, finance, decision making, power, diversity, and vision.
Publisher PM Press, 2008
ISBN 1604860227, 9781604860221
Length 44 pages
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Joanne Richardson (ed.): An@rchitexts: Voices from the Global Digital Resistance (2005)
Filed under book | Tags: · activism, cultural resistance, floss, gift economy, mass media, net art, networks, social movements, tactical media

“An@rchitexts brings together a global mix of voices from the new ‘underground’: engaged artists intervening in local struggles on the streets, media producers promoting technologies based on sharing and cooperation rather than privatization and competition, activists participating in global networks built through electronic democracies and decentralized forms of cooperation, and extraordinary people creating an alternative society through their everyday practices.
As a matter of principle An@rchitexts reflects the first-hand perspective of those involved at the point of production, not distanced reflections by critics, specialists, or armchair theorists.”
Publisher Autonomedia, 2005
ISBN 1570271429, 9781570271427
368 pages
PDF (13 MB, no OCR, some pages missing, updated on 2019-11-7)
Comment (0)Mario Diani, Doug McAdam (eds.): Social Movements and Networks: Relational Approaches to Collective Action (2003)
Filed under book | Tags: · activism, community, environment, networks, politics, social movements

For the first time in a single volume, leading social movement researchers map the full range of applications of network concepts and tools to their field of inquiry. They illustrate how networks affect individual contributions to collective action in both democratic and non-democratic organizations; how patterns of inter-organizational linkages affect the circulation of resources both within movement milieus and between movement organizations and the political system; how network concepts and techniques may improve our grasp of the relationship between movements and elites, of the configuration of alliance and conflict structures, of the clustering of episodes of contention in protest cycles.Social Movements and Networks casts new light on our understanding of social movements and cognate social and political processes.
Publisher Oxford University Press, 2003
ISBN 0199251770, 9780199251773
Length 348 pages
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