On February 15, 2003, about 20 million people around the world protested against the imminent war in Iraq. In the Netherlands, 70,000 people marched in the streets of Amsterdam. This study focuses on the organization and mobilization processes preceding this event in Amsterdam. We trace how the organizers’ attempts to form a coalition and the quarrels that ensued affected mobilization efforts, composition of the demonstration, media attention, and, subsequently, how and when participants were mobilized. We argue that, although infrequently studied, the specific ways that initial mobilization structures are formed are critical factors in the trajectory of mobilization. We use in-depth interviews with the organizers, newspaper content analyse...
Contentious politics are on the rise, which urges us to question why ever more people decide to part...
This thesis is formed of three articles. Stand-alone pieces in their own right, they are nonetheless...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
This study tackles the question to what extent the composition of protest events is determined by th...
In this article, participants in two demonstrations are compared. The demonstrations took place in t...
Staging events with a large number of participants is a central means by which collective action mov...
On 1 October 2019, a wide-ranging anti-government protest took to the streets of Baghdad. Grievances...
When protests are successful, they force us to realize another world is possible. To be successful t...
Collective action literature tends to focus on how people are affiliated to mobilizing structures an...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
This study is about social movement protests / mobilisations in the UK and Europe. It shall collect ...
While acknowledging that protest participants are not a homogeneous group, scholars in social moveme...
While consensus on what should be included under the label of political participation is far from ha...
Defence date: 21 May 2012Examining Board: Professor H.G. Haupt (supervisor); Professor S. Smith, Pr...
Contentious politics are on the rise, which urges us to question why ever more people decide to part...
This thesis is formed of three articles. Stand-alone pieces in their own right, they are nonetheless...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....
This study tackles the question to what extent the composition of protest events is determined by th...
In this article, participants in two demonstrations are compared. The demonstrations took place in t...
Staging events with a large number of participants is a central means by which collective action mov...
On 1 October 2019, a wide-ranging anti-government protest took to the streets of Baghdad. Grievances...
When protests are successful, they force us to realize another world is possible. To be successful t...
Collective action literature tends to focus on how people are affiliated to mobilizing structures an...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
College students have historically played a prominent role in many movements and uprisings around th...
This study is about social movement protests / mobilisations in the UK and Europe. It shall collect ...
While acknowledging that protest participants are not a homogeneous group, scholars in social moveme...
While consensus on what should be included under the label of political participation is far from ha...
Defence date: 21 May 2012Examining Board: Professor H.G. Haupt (supervisor); Professor S. Smith, Pr...
Contentious politics are on the rise, which urges us to question why ever more people decide to part...
This thesis is formed of three articles. Stand-alone pieces in their own right, they are nonetheless...
This study highlights the role that critical events play in the demobilization of protest campaigns....