Multiple studies in political science consistently hold that left-wing ideology renders individuals more prone to protest behavior. However, the familiar association between left-wing ideology and protesting is not empirically corroborated in all democratic nations. Building on existing theoretical principles and applying them to diverse political contexts, this article sheds light on puzzling variation in protest behavior across new and old democracies. It argues that it is not the left that engenders protest. Instead, we demonstrate that which political camp engages in protest behavior depends on its historical legacies and cultural liberalism. Historical legacies reflect the ideological configuration at democratization. Protesting tends ...
This article elaborates relative deprivation theory to a societal level to argue that political unre...
Previous studies have found that left-wing and libertarian individuals are more likely to engage in ...
Facing democratic erosion, when do people take to the streets to protest in defence of democracy? Si...
Multiple studies in political science consistently hold that left-wing ideology renders individuals ...
<div><p>Classic studies of protest politics have traditionally defended the dominant left-wing orien...
Despite the voluminous literature on the ‘normalisation of protest’, the protest arena is seen as a ...
First published online: 13 January 2020Despite the voluminous literature on the 'normalisation of pr...
Who participates in protests? Much literature assumes that economic left-leaning individuals are exp...
This chapter examines protest participation as a distinct mode of political participation. The chapt...
In the recent decades protest participation has become most widely accepted and practiced form of ci...
In this far-reaching work, Swen Hutter demonstrates the usefulness of studying both electoral politi...
The literature considers nonviolent protests among the most important predictors of transitions towa...
Political protest plays an ambiguous role in the repertoire of political action. This essay examines...
In my PhD thesis I disentangle the rhetorical reactions of political parties to public opinion and p...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
This article elaborates relative deprivation theory to a societal level to argue that political unre...
Previous studies have found that left-wing and libertarian individuals are more likely to engage in ...
Facing democratic erosion, when do people take to the streets to protest in defence of democracy? Si...
Multiple studies in political science consistently hold that left-wing ideology renders individuals ...
<div><p>Classic studies of protest politics have traditionally defended the dominant left-wing orien...
Despite the voluminous literature on the ‘normalisation of protest’, the protest arena is seen as a ...
First published online: 13 January 2020Despite the voluminous literature on the 'normalisation of pr...
Who participates in protests? Much literature assumes that economic left-leaning individuals are exp...
This chapter examines protest participation as a distinct mode of political participation. The chapt...
In the recent decades protest participation has become most widely accepted and practiced form of ci...
In this far-reaching work, Swen Hutter demonstrates the usefulness of studying both electoral politi...
The literature considers nonviolent protests among the most important predictors of transitions towa...
Political protest plays an ambiguous role in the repertoire of political action. This essay examines...
In my PhD thesis I disentangle the rhetorical reactions of political parties to public opinion and p...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
This article elaborates relative deprivation theory to a societal level to argue that political unre...
Previous studies have found that left-wing and libertarian individuals are more likely to engage in ...
Facing democratic erosion, when do people take to the streets to protest in defence of democracy? Si...