
From global social movements such as the fight for women’s right to own property, protests against gendered violence that target women, to American domestic movements around rights of women to sit on juries, campus based slutwalk protests, and the more recent BLM protests and debates around defunding and protest policing, the series of papers focuses on the framing processes in the social movement literature.
Defund the Police: Perceptions among Protesters in the 2020 March on Washington. (coauthored with Cobbina-Dungy, Ashley Lacourse and Christina Dejong). Click here to access paper.
Protesting During a Pandemic: Narratives on Risk Taking and Motivation to Participating in the 2020 March on Washington. (coauthored with Jennifer Cobbina, Ashleigh Lacourse, and Erika Brooke). Click here to access paper.
“I will be out there everyday strong!” Protest Policing and Future Activism Among Ferguson and Baltimore Protestors. (coauthored with Jennifer Cobbina, Victor Rios and Michael Conteh). Click here to access paper.
‘No Shaming This Slut’: Strategic Frame Adaptation and North American SlutWalk Campaigns. (coauthored with Kelly Birch Maginot). Click here to access paper.
Rape Protests in India and the Birth of a New Repertoire. (coauthored with Sarah Fitzgerald). Click here to access paper. Click here to access paper.
Strategic Framing Work(s): How Micro-credit Loans facilitate Anti-Witch Hunt Movements (coauthored with Anu Chakravarty). Click here to access paper.
The Fight for Property Rights: How Changes in Movement Actors and History Brought about the Changes in Frames in a Single Movement. Click here to access paper.
Becoming Full Citizens: The U.S. Women’s Jury Rights Campaigns, the Pace of Reform, and Strategic Adaptation. (coauthored with Holly McCammon et al). Click here to access paper.
