Social movements occur for various reasons and are promoted by various means. People are motivated by what influences their personality. The social movement can be easily defined as an organizational effort by the group to promote or resist changes within the group or society as a whole. To seek change, people have to look at something troublesome. Various political circumstances may also support or interfere with social movements and extremists. Activists and social movement organizations may be able to influence politicians' ideas more, use political instability, or use political systems to control their ability to act.
Non-governmental organizations sometimes contrast with social movements. This is a false dichotomy, just as supporters of social movements want the movement to be more progressive and more dynamic than NGOs. NGOs are an integral part of social movements. Similarly, civil society is a broader concept of all social activities, including individuals, groups, and movements. Whether civil society also covers all economic activities remains a matter of debate. In many cases, society seems to be composed of three sectors, the government, the private sector, and civil society excluding civil society.
Sociology analyzes social stability and factors that influence the dynamics of social movements such as labor, civil rights, feminism, LGBTQ, democracy, environmental protection, both in present and in history. Research has identified the conditions under which these movements occur and the targets that affect their success or failure.
There are some additional lessons about the results of the campaign on the civil rights movement. In particular, when interpreting the results of exercises, careful consideration should be given to various costs of the target and participation in sports by third parties. Although we refer to "sports" in singular form, it is actually more accurate to consider exercise as a different constellation of individuals and organizations with different strategies and goals. In terms of obtaining legislative benefits, attention to the civil rights movement can provide information, but it also has problems due to the unique characteristics of the civil rights struggle. For example, the main demand of campaigns is already broadly endorsed, and the cost to implement these changes may be limited primarily to a certain region of the United States. For example, assuming that Birmingham's protest in 1963 was directed to the civil rights law in 1964 in some automatic way it would be a mistake.
Movement is basically to change the force to achieve results. Normally, this requires relocation of political power, the Suffragette movement of the 1920s called for women a voting right, demanding the law that the equality movement of marriage in the 2000s grants same-sex marriage, the civil rights movement Starting in the 1950s and continuing today Terminate discrimination with apartheid. It also includes the migration of farm workers for fair wages and workers' rights in the 1960s, economic power like equal wages for equal labor from 1950s to the present for women and men It means relocation. Rewards work. Or, like the black wave movement in the 1960s and 1970s and the second wave of the feminist movement, it can change social power.