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  1. (soʊʃəl ) adjective [ADJECTIVE noun] B2. Social means relating to society or to the way society is organized. [...] socially adverb [ADVERB adjective/-ed] See full entry for 'social' Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Definition of 'unrest' unrest. (ʌnrest ) uncountable noun.

  2. Nov 21, 2023 · The meaning of social unrest is the disruption of public order, which may threaten public safety. The three main forms of social unrest include: Civil disorder: This is characterized by a...

  3. www.oecd.org › en › publicationsSocial Unrest | OECD

    The goal is to try to identify triggers (events that lead to social unrest) and drivers (causal roots) for the emergence of social unrest and, based on this functional analysis, to design policy options on how to avoid, mitigate or handle unrest.

  4. In collective behaviour: Social unrest. The general condition of the community in which milling is both frequent and widespread and in which rumour is recurrent is the crucible in which the more highly organized forms of collective behaviour develop. This condition, known as social unrest, can lead to… Read More

  5. Social unrest refers to a period of widespread dissatisfaction, protest, and conflict within a society. It often involves public demonstrations, civil disobedience, and various forms of collective action by citizens who are demanding change or expressing discontent.

  6. Jan 29, 2020 · Countries that are unable to suppress mobilization are especially likely to experience social unrest, according to the political-opportunity theory.

  7. May 20, 2022 · The IMF’s Reported Social Unrest Index attempts to do so by counting media mentions of words associated with unrest across 130 countries. The fraction of countries experiencing large spikes in this index, which typically reflect major unrest events, rose to around 3 percent in February.

  8. 9 min Read. Economic analysis can shine a revealing light on the causes and consequences of social unrest. The past decade was marked by a series of high-profile social protests—the Arab Spring, Black Lives Matter, the Gilets Jaunes, and Occupy Wall Street, to name just a few.

  9. The goal is to try to identify triggers (events that lead to social unrest) and drivers (causal roots) for the emergence of social unrest and, based on this functional analysis, to design policy options on how to avoid, mitigate or handle unrest.

  10. www.oecd.org › publications › social-unrest-9789264173460-enSocial Unrest | en | OECD

    Aug 10, 2012 · The framework should enable a better understanding of the circumstances that may trigger social unrest, how intensely that unrest is likely to materialize and what interventions promise to de-escalate the conflict or even prevent social unrest in the first place.