Description
This book offers a comprehensive historical analysis of relation-building and contained radicalization within the context of the Gaza pullout campaign. Eitan Y. Alimi explores how social movements strategically manage internal radical factions while pursuing political objectives.
Part of the Cambridge University Press Elements in Contentious Politics series, this work examines the mechanisms through which movements maintain cohesion despite ideological tensions. The author investigates the dynamics between moderate and radical actors, demonstrating how relationship-building serves as a crucial tool for movement sustainability and strategic effectiveness.
The Gaza disengagement case study provides concrete evidence for understanding broader patterns of collective action, political contention, and movement mobilization. This theoretical framework applies to contemporary social movements worldwide, making it essential reading for scholars of political science, history, and sociology interested in contentious politics and social change.







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