According to Armand Mauss, what happens in the second stage of a social movement’s development? The social movement declines and disappears from view. The social movement turns into a bureaucracy. The social movement becomes incorporated into institutions. Like-minded individuals begin to organize.

Respuesta :

Answer:

The answer is like-minded individuals begin to organize.

Explanation:

Armand Mauss theorized the behavior of social movements and his research led him to create a theoretical model for their study. Such model is composed of five stages that, according to Mauss, social movements tipically go through: incipiency, coalescence, institutionalization, fragmentation, and demise.

The second phase, coalescence, is when like-minded individuals begin to organize; it differs from the first phase in that, although in the first one large groups of people show discontent and distress about a particular situation, in the phase of coalescence, these people begin to organize. The social movement begins to organize itself and increase its resources and capabilities.

ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE
ACCESS MORE