This dissertation chronicles and compares the student protest movements at Stanford University, San Francisco State College, and the University of California at Berkeley during the same time period (1964–1970), and in the same geographic region (the San Francisco Bay Area). I chose these schools because I believed that given the close geographical proximity of the college and universities, the fact that each school had a local chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), movements for an Ethnic Studies department, an organized anti-war movement, and that these uprisings occurred in roughly the same time period (1964–1970) there would be a more pronounced trans-university student movement engaged in political protest affecting the pol...
A fundamental goal of social movement theory is to disentangle explanations of the origins and outco...
Descriptions of the contemporary student radical movement in North America by writers in the social ...
While introducing the four contributions to the special issue "Students, their protests, and their o...
This dissertation chronicles and compares the student protest movements at Stanford University, San ...
In 1968 the universities became the center of protest in a large variety of societies across the wor...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
Student movements are without question an integral part of the 1960s. University rebels were so loud...
Many Americans today associate the 1960’s antiwar student movements with violence and chaos. Images ...
The imminent philosopher George Santayana said, Those who do not remember the past are condemned to...
This dissertation project focuses on dynamics of mobilization and repression in the Occupy movement....
On the evening of April 30, 1970, President Richard Nixon announced that he was sending American gro...
During the sixties and seventies, the American university underwent a radical transformation, foreve...
After the degradation of labor union power throughout the postwar era, a new politics took hold amon...
Shorter WorksJohn Sulkowski’s Student Stars: How the Media Covered 1960’s Student Protest Leaders, d...
What are the continuities and changes of student activism throughout twentieth-century China? How di...
A fundamental goal of social movement theory is to disentangle explanations of the origins and outco...
Descriptions of the contemporary student radical movement in North America by writers in the social ...
While introducing the four contributions to the special issue "Students, their protests, and their o...
This dissertation chronicles and compares the student protest movements at Stanford University, San ...
In 1968 the universities became the center of protest in a large variety of societies across the wor...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
Student movements are without question an integral part of the 1960s. University rebels were so loud...
Many Americans today associate the 1960’s antiwar student movements with violence and chaos. Images ...
The imminent philosopher George Santayana said, Those who do not remember the past are condemned to...
This dissertation project focuses on dynamics of mobilization and repression in the Occupy movement....
On the evening of April 30, 1970, President Richard Nixon announced that he was sending American gro...
During the sixties and seventies, the American university underwent a radical transformation, foreve...
After the degradation of labor union power throughout the postwar era, a new politics took hold amon...
Shorter WorksJohn Sulkowski’s Student Stars: How the Media Covered 1960’s Student Protest Leaders, d...
What are the continuities and changes of student activism throughout twentieth-century China? How di...
A fundamental goal of social movement theory is to disentangle explanations of the origins and outco...
Descriptions of the contemporary student radical movement in North America by writers in the social ...
While introducing the four contributions to the special issue "Students, their protests, and their o...