This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns. Social movement scholars suggest that protest campaigns demobilize as a consequence of polarization within the campaign or the cooptation of the campaign leaders. I offer critical events as an alternative causal mechanism and argue that protest campaigns in ethnically divided societies are particularly combustible, as they have the potential to trigger unintended or unorchestrated communal violence. When such violence occurs, elite strategies change, mass support declines, and the campaign demobilizes. An empirical investigation of the dynamics of the demobilization phase of the anti-foreigner protest campaign in Assam, India, between 1979 a...
Social movement research often focusses on phases of success and large protest events. By contrast, ...
This is a case study of a social action group, Rural People's Organization (RPO) and its change sinc...
Do protests increase or decrease political engagement among the general public? Despite the fact tha...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
The mobilisation of protests has become more visible during the last few decades and the amount of l...
This study investigates the dynamics of transition from a peaceful protest wave to a violent insurge...
Why do some protests turn violent while others do not? The violent escalation of demonstrations is s...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
One path to social change is through sustained collective action. Although such actions often explic...
Social movements occupy a shared ideational and resource space, which is often referred to as the so...
When protests are successful, they force us to realize another world is possible. To be successful t...
Why are some ethnopolitical movements divided while others are relatively unified? A growing literat...
In recent years, the quantitative study of conflict has increasingly focused on small-scale and/or l...
The tea plantations of Dooars in West Bengal, India are among the primary tea growing belts in the c...
For decades, scholars have studied the relationship between repression and dissent. Researchers in t...
Social movement research often focusses on phases of success and large protest events. By contrast, ...
This is a case study of a social action group, Rural People's Organization (RPO) and its change sinc...
Do protests increase or decrease political engagement among the general public? Despite the fact tha...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
The mobilisation of protests has become more visible during the last few decades and the amount of l...
This study investigates the dynamics of transition from a peaceful protest wave to a violent insurge...
Why do some protests turn violent while others do not? The violent escalation of demonstrations is s...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
One path to social change is through sustained collective action. Although such actions often explic...
Social movements occupy a shared ideational and resource space, which is often referred to as the so...
When protests are successful, they force us to realize another world is possible. To be successful t...
Why are some ethnopolitical movements divided while others are relatively unified? A growing literat...
In recent years, the quantitative study of conflict has increasingly focused on small-scale and/or l...
The tea plantations of Dooars in West Bengal, India are among the primary tea growing belts in the c...
For decades, scholars have studied the relationship between repression and dissent. Researchers in t...
Social movement research often focusses on phases of success and large protest events. By contrast, ...
This is a case study of a social action group, Rural People's Organization (RPO) and its change sinc...
Do protests increase or decrease political engagement among the general public? Despite the fact tha...