The wave of sit-ins that swept through the American South in the spring of 1960 transformed the struggle for racial equality. This episode is widely cited in the literature on social movements, but the debate over its explanation remains unresolved?partly because previous research has relied on case studies of a few large cities. The authors use event-history analysis to trace the diffusion of sit-ins throughout the South and to compare cities where sit-ins occurred with the majority of cities where they did not. They assess the relative importance of three channels of diffusion: movement organizations, social networks, and news media. The authors find that movement organizations played an important role in orchestrating protest; what matte...
Shorter WorksJohn Sulkowski’s Student Stars: How the Media Covered 1960’s Student Protest Leaders, d...
At the same time that researchers of social movements are reaching consensus that social movements h...
Social movements often seek to draw attention to issues they deem important by organizingpublic demo...
The wave of sit-ins that swept through the American South in the spring of 1960 transformed the stru...
For the past three decades, scholars of social movements have debated whether collective protest is ...
The wave of sit-ins that swept the American South in 1960 has become a crucial episode in the litera...
Can protest bring about social change? Although scholarship on the consequences of social movements ...
The wave of sit-ins that swept through theAmerican South in the spring of 1960 trans- formed the str...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
In an attempt to make sense of shifts in the social movement sector and its relationship to conventi...
After many decades of sustained focus on the origins of social movements, scholars have recently beg...
In 1960, black youths conducted a sit-in in Greensboro, North Carolina to obtain the right to eat ...
Social movements occupy a shared ideational and resource space, which is often referred to as the so...
This book chapter is not currently available in ORA. Citation: Biggs, M. & Andrews, K. T. (2010) Fro...
Staging events with a large number of participants is a central means by which collective action mov...
Shorter WorksJohn Sulkowski’s Student Stars: How the Media Covered 1960’s Student Protest Leaders, d...
At the same time that researchers of social movements are reaching consensus that social movements h...
Social movements often seek to draw attention to issues they deem important by organizingpublic demo...
The wave of sit-ins that swept through the American South in the spring of 1960 transformed the stru...
For the past three decades, scholars of social movements have debated whether collective protest is ...
The wave of sit-ins that swept the American South in 1960 has become a crucial episode in the litera...
Can protest bring about social change? Although scholarship on the consequences of social movements ...
The wave of sit-ins that swept through theAmerican South in the spring of 1960 trans- formed the str...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
In an attempt to make sense of shifts in the social movement sector and its relationship to conventi...
After many decades of sustained focus on the origins of social movements, scholars have recently beg...
In 1960, black youths conducted a sit-in in Greensboro, North Carolina to obtain the right to eat ...
Social movements occupy a shared ideational and resource space, which is often referred to as the so...
This book chapter is not currently available in ORA. Citation: Biggs, M. & Andrews, K. T. (2010) Fro...
Staging events with a large number of participants is a central means by which collective action mov...
Shorter WorksJohn Sulkowski’s Student Stars: How the Media Covered 1960’s Student Protest Leaders, d...
At the same time that researchers of social movements are reaching consensus that social movements h...
Social movements often seek to draw attention to issues they deem important by organizingpublic demo...