Social movements have traditionally viewed free-riders as a problem for effective mobilization, but under the influence of the nonprofit industrial complex, it is possible that movements actively facilitate their presence. Free-riders become an economic resource to professionalized movements seeking to increase wealth and visibility inthe crowded social movement space by discouraging meaningful attitude or behavior change from their audiences and concentrating power among movement elites. Actively cultivated free-riding is exemplified by the professionalized Nonhuman Animal rights movement which promotes flexitarianism over ethical veganism despite its goal of nonhuman liberation. Major social-psychological theories of persuasion in additio...
Alternative food systems (namely the humane product movement) have arisen to address societal concer...
In a qualitative content analysis of The Vegan Society’s quarterly publication, The Vegan, spanning ...
How does an issue come to be defined as a social problem? Once a problem is defined as such, what ar...
In the 1970s, professionalization emerged as a new and cemented form of advocacy in the Western soci...
This paper offers an exploratory analysis of social movement theory as it relates to the nonhuman a...
A popular tactic in the professional nonhuman animal rights movement is to utilize species-specific ...
Given their tendency to splinter over tactics and goals, social movements are rarely unified. While ...
This article explores the sexual objectification of female-identified volunteers in social movements...
Social movements and free riders: Examining resource mobilization theory through the Bolivian Water ...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
Social movements aim to mobilise support from the society to achieve their goals, but in reality, th...
This paper was written as a final project for POLS 419 Social Movements and Political Protests with ...
Globalization has exacerbated speciesism both socially and economically. Veganism and its subsequent...
Through this study, I aim to demonstrate why individuals become involved in activism by utilizing th...
Inquiry into how social movements affect change has historically been grounded in either sociology o...
Alternative food systems (namely the humane product movement) have arisen to address societal concer...
In a qualitative content analysis of The Vegan Society’s quarterly publication, The Vegan, spanning ...
How does an issue come to be defined as a social problem? Once a problem is defined as such, what ar...
In the 1970s, professionalization emerged as a new and cemented form of advocacy in the Western soci...
This paper offers an exploratory analysis of social movement theory as it relates to the nonhuman a...
A popular tactic in the professional nonhuman animal rights movement is to utilize species-specific ...
Given their tendency to splinter over tactics and goals, social movements are rarely unified. While ...
This article explores the sexual objectification of female-identified volunteers in social movements...
Social movements and free riders: Examining resource mobilization theory through the Bolivian Water ...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
Social movements aim to mobilise support from the society to achieve their goals, but in reality, th...
This paper was written as a final project for POLS 419 Social Movements and Political Protests with ...
Globalization has exacerbated speciesism both socially and economically. Veganism and its subsequent...
Through this study, I aim to demonstrate why individuals become involved in activism by utilizing th...
Inquiry into how social movements affect change has historically been grounded in either sociology o...
Alternative food systems (namely the humane product movement) have arisen to address societal concer...
In a qualitative content analysis of The Vegan Society’s quarterly publication, The Vegan, spanning ...
How does an issue come to be defined as a social problem? Once a problem is defined as such, what ar...