Although Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not yet been systematic research on its activists’ recruitment pathways and modes of participation. In this article, we focus on the mobilization success (Staggenborg 1995) of Occupy and adopt the concepts of ‘free space’ and ‘modes of association’ (Polletta 1999) to understand how individuals came to participate in Occupy. We consider biographical and structural availability and make distinctions between those more or less involved. By drawing on qualitative and quantitative data gathered in November and December 2011 in London we find that Occupy activists take a range of pathways into differential forms of involvement (more or less visible or time-consuming, ...
This paper situates the discourse of the Occupy movement within the context of radical political phi...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Organizational scholars have examined how social movements generate institutional change through con...
Although Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not yet been systema...
types: ArticleAlthough Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not ye...
The Occupy movement is one of many new protest movements that emerged in the year 2011. The limits, ...
This paper examines the process through which Occupy activists came to constitute themselves as a co...
This critical hermeneutic case study of the Occupy movement and Occupy Portland considers indicators...
The Occupy Movement represents the evolving nature of contemporary social movements. It employs trad...
Dr David Bates (reporting on research produced in collaboration with Dr Matthew Ogilvie and Emma Pol...
Networked social movements (NSMs) are hybrid forms of social organization that rely on the platforms...
This article studies the mass protests that took place all around the globe in 2011 in order to reco...
The occupation of public space has become a key part of the repertoire of contention of contemporary...
Scholars and activists have hotly debated the relationship between social media and social movement ...
How do you communicate a protest movement? And how do communication practices shape its character a...
This paper situates the discourse of the Occupy movement within the context of radical political phi...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Organizational scholars have examined how social movements generate institutional change through con...
Although Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not yet been systema...
types: ArticleAlthough Occupy has received extensive media and scholarly attention, there has not ye...
The Occupy movement is one of many new protest movements that emerged in the year 2011. The limits, ...
This paper examines the process through which Occupy activists came to constitute themselves as a co...
This critical hermeneutic case study of the Occupy movement and Occupy Portland considers indicators...
The Occupy Movement represents the evolving nature of contemporary social movements. It employs trad...
Dr David Bates (reporting on research produced in collaboration with Dr Matthew Ogilvie and Emma Pol...
Networked social movements (NSMs) are hybrid forms of social organization that rely on the platforms...
This article studies the mass protests that took place all around the globe in 2011 in order to reco...
The occupation of public space has become a key part of the repertoire of contention of contemporary...
Scholars and activists have hotly debated the relationship between social media and social movement ...
How do you communicate a protest movement? And how do communication practices shape its character a...
This paper situates the discourse of the Occupy movement within the context of radical political phi...
Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011, when hundreds of people with grievances regarding th...
Organizational scholars have examined how social movements generate institutional change through con...