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Journal Article

Citation

Cobbina JE, Chaudhuri S, Rios VM, Conteh M. Sociol. Forum 2019; 34(2): 409-433.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Eastern Sociological Society, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/socf.12503

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

An established body of literature shows that people engage in protest events for a number of reasons, including grievances, collective identity, increased efficacy, and emotions. However, it is unclear what happens to individuals' motivation toward protest participation as they experience the reality of repressive policing. This study contributes to the theoretical body of knowledge of protest policing and social movements by investigating the microlevel processes that affect protest participation. Specifically, we build from the insights of previous research by examining how 102 Ferguson and Baltimore protesters with varying levels of commitment--revolutionary, intermittent, tourist--experienced repressive policing and how such tactics affected their subsequent decision to engage in future activism. Our findings suggest that those with the strongest commitment toward protest goals experienced the most repressive tactics, and yet did not seem to be deterred in their motivation to be engaged in future protests. In contrast, while repressive tactics appeared to deter the less committed individuals from street protests, they remained motivated to engage in other forms of civic engagement.


Language: en

Keywords

Black Lives Matter; police brutality; policing; protest; race; social movements

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