This article elaborates relative deprivation theory to a societal level to argue that political unrest is rooted in the polarization of citizens' grievance judgments, rather than the mean level of societal grievance. Using data from twelve cross-national survey projects, it examines the relationship between citizen polarization and political protest in eighty-four democracies and semi-democracies from 1977 to 2010. The study finds that countries with more polarized citizens are more likely to experience nonviolent protest. Protests are most likely in countries where average citizen grievances are low but citizens are polarized, which is consistent with the elaborated theoretical expectations of relative deprivation theory
Do people signal protest by bringing out a protest vote when they feel they have been collectively d...
This paper analyses the role of peaceful and violent protest in the democratization process. We inte...
In a time of decreasing participation in party politics across Europe, both protests and deliberatio...
The economic crisis that started in 2008 has negatively affected European nations to different degre...
In this paper we analyse whether relative deprivation has divergent effects on different types of so...
Political protest plays an ambiguous role in the repertoire of political action. This essay examines...
How do economic grievances affect citizens’ inclination to protest? Given rising levels of inequalit...
The literature considers nonviolent protests among the most important predictors of transitions towa...
International audienceThe present research focuses on populism as a bottom-up phenomenon that emerge...
Political participation is deemed to be a fundamental component of democratic regimes. The literatur...
Multiple studies in political science consistently hold that left-wing ideology renders individuals ...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
Do people signal protest by bringing out a protest vote when they feel they have been collectively d...
In this thesis, I explore the determinants of protests across 15 post-colonial countries from 1990 t...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
Do people signal protest by bringing out a protest vote when they feel they have been collectively d...
This paper analyses the role of peaceful and violent protest in the democratization process. We inte...
In a time of decreasing participation in party politics across Europe, both protests and deliberatio...
The economic crisis that started in 2008 has negatively affected European nations to different degre...
In this paper we analyse whether relative deprivation has divergent effects on different types of so...
Political protest plays an ambiguous role in the repertoire of political action. This essay examines...
How do economic grievances affect citizens’ inclination to protest? Given rising levels of inequalit...
The literature considers nonviolent protests among the most important predictors of transitions towa...
International audienceThe present research focuses on populism as a bottom-up phenomenon that emerge...
Political participation is deemed to be a fundamental component of democratic regimes. The literatur...
Multiple studies in political science consistently hold that left-wing ideology renders individuals ...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
Do people signal protest by bringing out a protest vote when they feel they have been collectively d...
In this thesis, I explore the determinants of protests across 15 post-colonial countries from 1990 t...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
Do people signal protest by bringing out a protest vote when they feel they have been collectively d...
This paper analyses the role of peaceful and violent protest in the democratization process. We inte...
In a time of decreasing participation in party politics across Europe, both protests and deliberatio...