Mobilization
@mobilization.bsky.social
1.2K followers 77 following 100 posts
Mobilization: The premier journal of social movements research. https://meridian.allenpress.com/mobilization
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Our winter newsletter is out!

Highlights from our current issue, along with details on our summer conference.
Mobilization Winter Update
Advancing the Science of Contentious Politics
mobilization.beehiiv.com
Reposted by Mobilization
Check out this special issue of @mobilization.bsky.social on "Weaving the Transnational Anti-gender Networks", edited by Manuela Caiani and @tranfi.bsky.social, and featuring a contribution by yours truly.

meridian.allenpress.com/mobilization...
Volume 29 Issue 4 | Mobilization: an International Quarterly
meridian.allenpress.com
Our winter special issue is online!

"Weaving the Transnational Anti-Gender Networks" guest edited by Manuela Caiani and @tranfi.bsky.social

meridian.allenpress.com/mobilization...
Weaving the Transnational Anti-Gender Networks
Manuela Caiani and Ivan Tranfić

Assembling God's 'Last Best Hope': The Expanding Reach of the World Congress of Families
Kristopher Velasco and Jeffrey Swindle

Anti-Gender Regimes, Feminist Politics, and the Challenge of Societal Democratization
Emanuela Lombardo

Virtual Brokers and National Boundaries: Transnational Online Networks in European Anti-Gender Movements
Dominika Tronina

Capitalizing on COVID-19: Crisis Exploitation in the Christian Right's International Campaign for Family Values
Martijn Mos

The Making of a Translocal Anti-Gender Alliance and Hope for Progressive Change
Ipek Demirsu

Anti-Gender Civilizationism and the West-East Divide: The Case of the World Congress of Families
Katja Kahlina

Who's the Real Feminist? Feminist Discursive Boundary Making in the Context of Anti-Gender Campaigns
Kerstin Jacobsson, Eva Karlberg, Elżbieta Korolczuk, and Anna Meeuwisse
David Meyer (Irvine) closes the conference with a dynamic presentation on "How to Save the World"
Steven Lauterwasser (Northeastern University) uses DOCA to examine the pre-history of the immigration rights movements.
Final conference panel 😔

Leslie Wood (York) on when, why and how movements look to the past.
Hank Johnston (SDSU & @mobyjournal founder/publisher) put himself on the program for a talk on structural and cognitive availability in the Hong Kong student movement.
Junghun Oh (UCSD) on how marginalized actors develop new political identities using the case of mothers in the Korean disability rights movement.
Starting of the afternoon, Junius Brown (Berkeley) on performative governance as a state strategy in China.
Rasha Naseif (UC-Merced) on barriers and accelerators to working-class youth participation in climate action.
Jasmine Till (UCLA) on activist burnout and self-care in Asian American social movements
Conor McCutcheon (NYU) on movement-countermovement dynamics and identity formation in the 2014 Umbrella Movement.
Conor McCutcheon (NYU) on movement-countermovement dynamics and identity formation in the 2014 Umbrella Movement.
Moby Conference Day 2

Aaron Schutz (Wisconsin-Milwaukee) on how "mobilize" is a swear word to organizers.
Final panel of the day

Jenn Earl (Delaware) on catching up with repressive governments in our understanding how repression works.
Final organizational strategies panelist:

Barak Kesgin (Istanbul Beykent) on waves of activism in the animal rights movement in Turkey.
More from the organizational strategy panel

Lynsy Smithson-Stanley (JHU/SNF Agora) on designing resilient coalitions in the climate movement.
Afternoon Organizational Strategy panel

Paul Dosh (Macalester) on the strategies of goals of prison reform movements in Latin America.
Media and Movements

Ana Lopez Rico (UCSD) on how US cultural entrepreneurs responded to femicide in Ciudad Juarez.
Media and Movements Panel

Thomas Davidson (Rutgers) on mechanisms for gaming online engagement used by the far right.
Media and Movements Panel

Zahra Mansoursharifloo (Kansas) shows how celebrity capital turned into political capital during the 2022 Women, Life, Freedom movement in Iran.
Media and Movements Panel

Grey Rochon (UC Irvine) on how nonviolent occupations led SDS to break through the protest paradigm and receive substantive coverage.
Prochoice advocates deployed a variety of arguments with state-level variation, while pro-life posters only had one nation-wide, time-invariant frame.
Final panelist on the right-wing: Kelsey Kretschmer (Oregon State) on threats and opportunities after Roe using topic modeling to look at state-level patterns in social media rhetoric.

Prochoice tweet volume went up everywhere, but most where rights faced the greatest threat.