The Britannica Guide to Political and Social Movements That Changed the Modern 
World (Turning Points in History) By Heather M. Campbell
Publisher: Rosen Education Service 2009-12-20 | 304 Pages | ISBN: 1615300163 | 
PDF | 4 MB

There is strength in numbers, which is why efforts to effect change that have 
plenty of support and high participation rates are the most likely to succeed. 
Such movements are formed when people organize with the goal of putting ideas 
into action, often in an attempt to bring about political or social change. As 
many successful political and social movements through the ages have 
demonstrated, groups with a well-thought-out agenda and clear goals can raise 
civilizations to new heights or bring them down, create empires or destroy 
them. They can radically alter the course of a nation and the lives of its 
citizens.

The history and foundations of the most influential political and social 
movements in the world form the basis of this book. A selection of movements is 
covered, including a number of political philosophies—democracy, socialism, 
communism, fascism—that seek to define the way that people should be ruled. 
These are the organized concepts and beliefs that, once put into practice by 
dedicated interest groups, have changed the world—sometimes for the better, 
sometimes not. By their very nature, political and social movements deal with 
two main questions: How should society be organized, and what is the best way 
to bring about a reorganization, if necessary? Naturally, the former question 
implies that the present arrangement of society is less than ideal—at least 
according to those people who wish to improve their lot. Methods of 
reorganizing society include persuasion and coercion. Persuasion involves 
appeals designed to sway people's minds and attitudes through the dissemination 
of information. Coercion, on the other hand, involves the concrete use or 
threat of violence. This can be organized force such as military conquest or 
internal revolution, or guerrilla tactics such as those used by terrorists. 
Throughout history, certain political movements have become so powerful that 
they were able to overthrow a country's existing government through revolution, 
which is the near-perfect melding of persuasion and coercion. Spurred (and 
persuaded) by the eloquence of fervent individuals, ordinary citizens have 
risen up and fought for the right to determine how they were governed. For 
instance, the leaders of the American and French revolutions were heavily 
influenced by ideas expressed in the writings of men such as John Locke, Thomas 
Hobbes, Jean-JacquesRousseau, and Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de LaBrède 
et de Montesquieu. The concepts popularized by these writers, which form the 
basis of classical liberalism,
support the idea that people have the right to take action to improve the 
conditions under which they live, and that the authority of government over 
individuals should be limited. The spread of their ideas compelled people to 
take up arms against what they deemed an oppressive regime. The result of both 
revolutions was a move from monarchy to democracy.

Another political movement that effected radical governmental hange through 
revolution was the form of socialism called communism. Based on ideas proposed 
by a philosopher, Karl Marx, communism was formulated to address the problem of 
class struggle, whereby the upper class has most of the wealth while the lower 
classes do most of the work. The supporters of communism believed that they 
could better the lives of everyone if all people could be made to act for the 
common, rather than the individual, good. In the 20th century both Russia and 
China overthrew imperial regimes and ultimately instituted communist forms of 
government.

In contrast to the authoritarian rule of the communists, social democracy, 
which was adopted in countries such as the UK, provides a balance between the 
overarching individual freedom of classical liberalism and the igidly 
structured form of communism seen in the Soviet Union and China. Under this 
form of socialism, the government maintains control of the distribution of some 
resources to the populace, such as national health care, so that everyone has 
access to them. However, the people retain their individual freedoms and right 
to self-rule.

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