Attitude toward protest uniquely predicts (normative and nonnormative) political action by (advantaged and disadvantaged) group members (original ) (raw )The social psychology of protest
Jacquelien van Stekelenburg
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Promoting or Opposing Social Change: Political Orientations, Moral Convictions and Protest Intentions
Stefano Passini
Europe's Journal of Psychology, 2019
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Combining motivations and emotion: The motivational dynamics of protest participation
Jacquelien van Stekelenburg , Wilco van Dijk
Revista de Psicolog& …, 2011
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Social Protest and Policy Attitudes: The Impact of Temporal and Spatial Exposure
Regina Branton , Tony Carey
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Pathways to Collective Protest: Calculation, Identification, or Emotion? A Critical Analysis of the Role of Group-Based Anger in Social Movement Participation
Stefan Stürmer
Journal of Social Issues, 2009
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Collective Emotions and Protest Vote
Carlo Altomonte
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2019
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Qualified support for normative vs. non-normative protest: Less invested members of advantaged groups are most supportive when the protest fits the opportunity for status improvement
Colin Wayne Leach
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2023
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A Social Psychology of Protest. Individuals in Action (Introduction)
Jacquelien van Stekelenburg
van Stekelenburg, Jacquelien, and Bert Klandermans. A Social Psychology of Protest: Individuals in Action. Cambridge University Press, 2024
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Is Protest Only Negative? Examining the Effect of Emotions and Affective Polarization on Protest Behaviour
Emilie van Haute
Politics and Governance, 2022
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Doing Democracy: The Social Psychological Mobilization and Consequences of Collective Action
Winnifred Louis
Social Issues and Policy Review, 2013
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Protest activity, RS, Bäck et al
Emma Bäck
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Becoming a Movement Society? Patterns in the Public Acceptance of Protest, 1985-2006
Soon Seok Park
Sociological Focus, 2019
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Emotive participants? : Emotions, apathy, and protest participation
Emilie van Haute
Bitter-Sweet Democracy? Analyzing citizens' resentment towards politics in Belgium, 2024
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Why Do People Protest? Comparing Demonstrators' Motives Across Issues and Nations
Joris Verhulst
webhost.ua.ac.be
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Emotion and Efficacy Routes to Normative and Non-normative Collective Action 1 Explaining Radical Group Behaviour : Developing Emotion and Efficacy Routes to Normative and Non-normative Collective Action
Roomana Siddiqui
2013
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What affects the decision to take an active part in social justice protests? The impacts of confidence in society, time preference and interest in politics
Shosh Shahrabani , Eyal Lahav
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 2014
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EFFECTS OF EDUCATION ON ATTITUDE TO PROTEST
Bert Useem , Mark Rodeghier
American Sociological Review, 1986
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Political Action as a Function of Grievances, Risk, and Social Identity: An Experimental Approach
victor asal
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 2018
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Explaining Radical Group Behavior: Developing Emotion and Efficacy Routes to Normative and Nonnormative Collective Action
Rim Saab
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2011
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Acting in solidarity: Testing an extended dual pathway model of collective action by bystander group members
Russell Spears
British Journal of Social Psychology, 2014
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The Importance of Protesters' Morals: Moral Obligation as a Key Variable to Understand Collective Action
Monica Alzate
Frontiers in psychology, 2018
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Emotions, Ideology and Collective Political Action
Monica Alzate
Universitas Psychologica, 2010
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Support for political mobilization and protest in Egypt and Morocco: an online experimental study
victor asal
Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 2017
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Is Martin Luther King or Malcolm X the more acceptable face of protest? High-status groups’ reactions to low-status groups’ collective action
Russell Spears
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2019
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Protest activity, Social Incentives, and Rejection sensitivity: Results from a survey experiment about tuition fees
Gema M Garcia Albacete
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The Dogmatism of Dissent: How Open-Minded Cognition Influences Protest Attitudes
Chad Osteen
2019
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The Dynamics of Political Protest: Feedback Effects and Interdependence in the Explanation of Protest Participation
Karl-Dieter Opp
European Sociological Review, 2010
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Explaining Radical Group Behaviour: Developing Emotion and Efficacy Routes to Normative and Non-normative Collective Action
Russell Spears
PsycEXTRA Dataset, 2000
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Social Protest and Policy Attitudes: The Case of the 2006 Immigrant Rallies
Tony Carey
American Journal of Political Science, 2014
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Protesters as “passionate economists”: A dynamic dual pathway model of coping with collective disadvantage
Colin Wayne Leach
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How Do Political Opportunities Impact Protest Potential? A Multilevel Cross-national Assessment
Dana Williams
International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 2023
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