Under what circumstances are women more likely to protest? Despite significant cross-national research on contentious politics in general and women’s collective mobilization in particular, no study to date has offered a systematic global analysis of mass mobilization among women. Using newly gathered data on women’s nonviolent protest for the years from 1991 to 2009, this article offers a cross-national analysis of the socioeconomic and political correlates of women’s protest. Drawing insight from the major theoretical approaches on contentious politics, the results from the data analysis indicate that higher levels of gendered economic and political discrimination, strong presence of women’s organizations, and higher female population rate...
The central focus of this work is on the role of group consciousness in the political mobilization p...
The RNGS team of international scholars designed and carried out this large-scale comparative resear...
This article presents the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) "Violent Political Protest"\u80\u9d (...
Under what circumstances are women more likely to protest? Despite significant cross-national resear...
Objectives: We advance hypotheses on the extent to which the three main aspects of globalization—eco...
Research on gender and politics has primarily focused on women’s participation in women’s movements ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
This study aims to shed light on the gendered dynamics of nonviolent resistance and democratisation....
Over the last decades, the world has not only seen an increase in nonviolent campaigns that challeng...
Women’s rights are not only acknowledged as fundamental human rights, but have also been linked to m...
The comparison and change of social movement strength is of great interest not only to social moveme...
Responses to the Great Recession are varied across welfare states and gendered in their consequences...
Why do women protest? Why do women protest “as women”? Why do some women participate in protests but...
Women's movements - both domestic and international - have made enormous political gainsjust in the ...
While there are numerous examples of research investigating who would protest and why, the research ...
The central focus of this work is on the role of group consciousness in the political mobilization p...
The RNGS team of international scholars designed and carried out this large-scale comparative resear...
This article presents the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) "Violent Political Protest"\u80\u9d (...
Under what circumstances are women more likely to protest? Despite significant cross-national resear...
Objectives: We advance hypotheses on the extent to which the three main aspects of globalization—eco...
Research on gender and politics has primarily focused on women’s participation in women’s movements ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
This study aims to shed light on the gendered dynamics of nonviolent resistance and democratisation....
Over the last decades, the world has not only seen an increase in nonviolent campaigns that challeng...
Women’s rights are not only acknowledged as fundamental human rights, but have also been linked to m...
The comparison and change of social movement strength is of great interest not only to social moveme...
Responses to the Great Recession are varied across welfare states and gendered in their consequences...
Why do women protest? Why do women protest “as women”? Why do some women participate in protests but...
Women's movements - both domestic and international - have made enormous political gainsjust in the ...
While there are numerous examples of research investigating who would protest and why, the research ...
The central focus of this work is on the role of group consciousness in the political mobilization p...
The RNGS team of international scholars designed and carried out this large-scale comparative resear...
This article presents the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) "Violent Political Protest"\u80\u9d (...