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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Why People Don't Participate in Collective Action

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Twine Hannington Bananuka & David Mugarra. (2023) ‘To engage or not to’: translating civic education to civic engagement. International Journal of Lifelong Education 42:1, pages 22-36.
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Riley Tucker & Michael C. Gearhart. (2022) Social Ties and Collective Efficacy as Predictors of Volunteering. Community Development 53:1, pages 109-125.
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Felix Butzlaff & Sören Messinger-Zimmer. (2020) Undermining or defending democracy? The consequences of distrust for democratic attitudes and participation. Critical Policy Studies 14:3, pages 249-266.
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Moletsane Monyake & Dan Hough. (2019) Citizens, bribery and the propensity to protest. Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 57:3, pages 282-302.
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Cory Fletcher, Anja van Heelsum & Conny Roggeband. (2018) Water privatization, hegemony and civil society: What Motivates Individuals to Protest About Water Privatization?. Journal of Civil Society 14:3, pages 241-256.
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Eric Swank & Breanne Fahs. (2016) Gay rights activism: collection action frames, networks, and protesting among gays, lesbians, and bisexuals. Journal of Civil Society 12:4, pages 430-447.
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Helmut K. Anheier. (2014) Civil Society Research: Ten Years on. Journal of Civil Society 10:4, pages 335-339.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Meixi Zhuang, Zhengxu Wang & Xiaoyuan Li. (2023) Social Embeddedness and Protest Avoidance: Evidence from China. Journal of Conflict Resolution 67:9, pages 1704-1730.
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Olivia Brown, Catherine Lowery & Laura G. E. Smith. (2022) How opposing ideological groups use online interactions to justify and mobilise collective action. European Journal of Social Psychology 52:7, pages 1082-1110.
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Corinna Jentzsch & Juan Masullo. (2022) Violent or non-violent action? Wartime civilian resistance in Colombia and Mozambique. Political Geography 99, pages 102761.
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Anna Julia Fiedler, Amy Yuen‐lam Tsang & Frank Reichert. (2022) Why not? Explaining sympathizers' non‐participation: The example of Hong Kong's 2019 social movement. Sociology Compass 16:8.
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Nevin Solak, Maya Tamir, Nebi Sümer, John T. Jost & Eran Halperin. (2021) Expressive suppression as an obstacle to social change: Linking system justification, emotion regulation, and collective action. Motivation and Emotion 45:5, pages 661-682.
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Hannah R. Feldman. (2021) Motivators of Participation and Non-Participation in Youth Environmental Protests. Frontiers in Political Science 3.
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Maarten Johannes Bezouw, Jojanneke Toorn & Julia Christina Becker. (2021) Social creativity: Reviving a social identity approach to social stability. European Journal of Social Psychology 51:2, pages 409-422.
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Monica Fieck, Anca M. Miron, Nyla R. Branscombe & Rachel Mazurek. (2020) “We Stand up for Each Other!” An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of Collective Action among U.S. College Women. Sex Roles 83:11-12, pages 657-674.
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Maria Fernandes-Jesus, Maria Luísa Lima & José-Manuel Sabucedo. (2020) “Save the climate! Stop the oil”: Actual protest behavior and core framing tasks in the Portuguese climate movement. Journal of Social and Political Psychology 8:1, pages 426-452.
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Jason T. Carbone. (2019) Bonding social capital and collective action: Associations with residents' perceptions of their neighbourhoods. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 29:6, pages 504-519.
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Jason T. Carbone & Stephen Edward McMillin. (2018) Neighborhood collective efficacy and collective action: The role of civic engagement. Journal of Community Psychology 47:2, pages 311-326.
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Emma F Thomas, Nicola Cary, Laura GE Smith, Russell Spears & Craig McGarty. (2018) The role of social media in shaping solidarity and compassion fade: How the death of a child turned apathy into action but distress took it away. New Media & Society 20:10, pages 3778-3798.
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Avelie Stuart, Emma F. Thomas & Ngaire Donaghue. (2018) “I don't really want to be associated with the self-righteous left extreme”: Disincentives to participation in collective action. Journal of Social and Political Psychology 6:1, pages 242-270.
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