Protest policing is central to research on social movement repression and of great practical importance. Here, we examine competing explanations for observed changes in the likelihood that police will attend any given protest event and make arrests, use violence, or both in New York State from 1960 to 1995. While many researchers point to changes within law enforcement as the primary cause for “softer policing” over this period, we show, using a modified Kitagawa-Oaxaca-Blinder (KOB) decomposition, that the institutionalization of the protest sector was more responsible for changes over time in observed protest policing. This implies that too much credit has been given in the literature to law enforcement for softening responses to protest ...
In October 2016, the Home Secretary ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave', arguin...
Civil order is an important aspect of a healthy democratic society, however the right to express dis...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
Research on repression and protest policing has increasingly attempted to unpack the social, politic...
In an attempt to make sense of shifts in the social movement sector and its relationship to conventi...
Expectations about police responses to disorderly campus gatherings are explored here using details ...
In this paper we focus on the handling by the police of mass demonstrations in Switzerland during th...
This research examines what has been referred to as the “Miami model” of protest policing with a foc...
Protests challenging the police pose a significant reputational threat to law enforcement. The threa...
In this paper we focus on the handling by the police of mass demonstrations in Switzerland during th...
Occupy Oakland was best known for its radical politics, disruptiveness, militancy and confrontations...
Over the past thirty years social scientists and particularly social historians have stressed the ne...
AbstractContention and Control: U.S. City and Police Responses to the Occupy Campaigns of 2011byNich...
The Kerner Commission identified factors contributing to police ineffectiveness during the 1960s civ...
Despite the longstanding traditions of tolerance, inclusion, and democracy in the United States, dis...
In October 2016, the Home Secretary ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave', arguin...
Civil order is an important aspect of a healthy democratic society, however the right to express dis...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
Research on repression and protest policing has increasingly attempted to unpack the social, politic...
In an attempt to make sense of shifts in the social movement sector and its relationship to conventi...
Expectations about police responses to disorderly campus gatherings are explored here using details ...
In this paper we focus on the handling by the police of mass demonstrations in Switzerland during th...
This research examines what has been referred to as the “Miami model” of protest policing with a foc...
Protests challenging the police pose a significant reputational threat to law enforcement. The threa...
In this paper we focus on the handling by the police of mass demonstrations in Switzerland during th...
Occupy Oakland was best known for its radical politics, disruptiveness, militancy and confrontations...
Over the past thirty years social scientists and particularly social historians have stressed the ne...
AbstractContention and Control: U.S. City and Police Responses to the Occupy Campaigns of 2011byNich...
The Kerner Commission identified factors contributing to police ineffectiveness during the 1960s civ...
Despite the longstanding traditions of tolerance, inclusion, and democracy in the United States, dis...
In October 2016, the Home Secretary ruled out a public inquiry into the ‘Battle of Orgreave', arguin...
Civil order is an important aspect of a healthy democratic society, however the right to express dis...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....