The VCAA study design requires students to study one specific social movement in depth, analysing it across six interrelated components: type, nature and purpose, power, stage, opposition’s use of power, and Chenoweth’s framework.
This note uses the Australian Marriage Equality Movement as the worked example, but other appropriate Australian movements include: the Aboriginal land rights movement, the climate/environment movement, the women’s suffrage movement, or the disability rights movement.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The nature and purpose of a social movement are the foundation for the subsequent analysis. Knowing what a movement is, who it includes, what it seeks to achieve, and how it operates is necessary before you can analyse its power, stage, and influence on social change.
The marriage equality movement sought to change Australian law to allow same-sex couples to marry on the same legal terms as opposite-sex couples. It comprised:
The movement’s purposes included:
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 2004 | Howard government amends Marriage Act to explicitly exclude same-sex couples; movement begins to organise |
| 2004–2012 | Annual marches; repeated private member’s bills defeated in Parliament |
| 2012 | First Gillard government vote: defeated in Parliament |
| 2015–2017 | Plebiscite/postal survey debate; growing public support (polls consistently 60%+) |
| 2017 (September–November) | Australian Postal Survey: 61.6% “Yes”; 79% participation |
| December 2017 | Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 passes Parliament; movement achieves its primary goal |
STUDY HINT: Choose one social movement and prepare all six VCAA components (type, nature/purpose, power, stage, opposition, Chenoweth) before the exam. You will need to write extended responses drawing on all six — partial preparation will leave gaps in your exam response.
EXAM TIP: “Nature” refers to what the movement is (its characteristics, composition, tactics); “purpose” refers to what it seeks to achieve (its goals). Address both — don’t conflate them.