1st Edition
Protest, Movements, and Dissent in the Social Sciences A multidisciplinary perspective
1. Social sciences and social movements: the theoretical context Giovanni A. Travaglino
2. Unity within diversity: a social psychological analysis of the internal diversity of the Indignados movement Tiina Likki
3. The political economy of Israel’s ‘social justice’ protests: a class and generational analysis Zeev Rosenhek and Michael Shalev
4. Hashtags, ruling relations and the everyday: institutional ethnography insights on social movements Bram Meuleman and Corra Boushel
5. A matter of law and order: reporting the Salford riots in local news webpages Sharon Coen and Caroline Jones
6. The moral economy of the UK student protest movement 2010–2011 Joseph Ibrahim
7. Networks, counter-networks and political socialisation – paths and barriers to high-cost/risk activism in the 2010/11 student protests against fees and cuts Alexander Hensby
8. Something’s wrong here: transnational dissent and the unimagined community Brian Callan
9. Why the psychology of collective action requires qualitative transformation as well as quantitative change Andrew G. Livingstone
Biography
Giovanni A. Travaglino is a Research Associate in the School of Psychology at the University of Kent, Canterbury, UK. His research interests include leadership and deviance, collective opposition to organised crime, and protest. He is editor of Contention: The Multidisciplinary Journal of Social Protest, and founder of the Interdisciplinary Network for Social Protest Research.






