Abstract

A case study of a “failed interaction” between a Mohawk Indian women's health group and the Women's Peace Encampment in upstate New York is presented. We focus on a decision‐making process that, despite one group's professed interests, nevertheless served to hinder intercultural participation in a social movement We argue for events as the appropriate unit of analysis in the study of complex societies, and suggest that meanings, related to each other as components of interpretive frameworks, play an important role in the trajectory of a social movement

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