100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Political Participation And Protest - Book & Lectures Summary

Rating
2,5
(2)
Sold
22
Pages
48
Uploaded on
09-12-2020
Written in
2019/2020

ALL 3 INTERIM EXAMS INCLUDED: This is an extensive summary of the 2nd year course Political Participation and Protest. It was lectured when the COVID-19 situation already forced lecturers to teach the course online.

Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
December 9, 2020
Number of pages
48
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Political Participation and
Protest
Interim 1: Week 1 en 2..................................................................................................4
Lecture 1: Intro..............................................................................................................................4
1.1 Intro..................................................................................................................................................4
2.2 Van Deth, A Conceptual Map of Political Participation...................................................................4
2.3 Hutter & Kriesi, Movements of the Left, Movements of the Right Reconsidered............................5
Lecture 2: Parties & Voting..........................................................................................................7
2.1 The Socialization Model...................................................................................................................7
Smets et al. - A meta-analysis of individual-level research on voter turnout................................................8
2.2 The Resource Model.........................................................................................................................8
Antonucci et al. - The Malaise of the Squeezed Middle................................................................................9
2.3 Political Mobilization (political parties)...........................................................................................9
Krouwel - Party Models.................................................................................................................................9
2.4 The Psychological Model...............................................................................................................10
Lecture 3: Populism.....................................................................................................................11
Populism...............................................................................................................................................11
Mudde..........................................................................................................................................................11
Krouwel et al. - elements populism.............................................................................................................11
Understanding Varieties of European Populism - Smit et al. (2018)..........................................................13
Economic and Cultural Drivers of Populist Support.............................................................................14
Inglehart & Norris - Economic Have-Nots and Cultural Backlash.............................................................14
Oesch & Rennwald - Three Polar Political Space.......................................................................................15
Lecture 4: Movement Politics.....................................................................................................17
Della Porta - Movement Politics: an Introduction.......................................................................................17
4.1 Who Demonstrates?........................................................................................................................17
Norris & Walgrave - Who Demonstrates?...................................................................................................17
4.2 Potentials, Networks, Motivations & Barriers................................................................................18
Klandemans & Oegema...............................................................................................................................18

Interim 2: Week 4 en 5................................................................................................19
Lecture 5: Politics & The Internet.............................................................................................19
Hirzalla et al. Internet Use and Political Participation: Reflections on Mobilization/Normalization Contro-
versy....................................................................................................................................................................................19
Enroljas et al. Social Media and mobilization to Offline Demonstrations..................................................19
Lecture 6: Gender, Sexuality and Identity in Political Mobilization......................................21
Duyvendak - Gay and Lesbian movements Beyond Borders?....................................................................21
Bale et al. - Explaining Social democratic Responses to Challenge from the Populist Radical Right in
Western Europe..................................................................................................................................................................22


, Hooghe & Meeusen - Is Same-Sex Marriage Legislation..?.......................................................................23
Lecture 7: Radicalization............................................................................................................24
Van Stekelenburg & KlandeRmans - Radicalization...................................................................................24
Dalgaard-Nielsen - Violent Radicalization in Europe.................................................................................26
Doosje et al. - Susceptibility of Radical Right-Wing attitudes in Dutch Youth..........................................27
Lecture 8: Political Mobilization in Authoritarian Regimes...................................................29
Democratic Regimes.............................................................................................................................29
Brownlee - Politics under Authoritarianism................................................................................................30
Authoritarianism...................................................................................................................................30
Huber et al. - The Impact of Economic Development on Democracy.........................................................33
Çarkoglu et al. - Party Competition in the Middle East...............................................................................34
Debate about the role of social media...................................................................................................34
Interim 3: Week 6, 7 en 8............................................................................................35
Lecture 9: Campaigning and Framing......................................................................................35
9.1 Actors and Roles.............................................................................................................................35
9.2 Iyengar & Simon............................................................................................................................35
Iyengar & Simon - New Perspectives on Political Communication and Campaign Effects.......................35
9.3 Scheufele & Tewksbury.................................................................................................................38
Scheufele & Tewksbury - Framing, Agenda Setting and Priming..............................................................38
Chong & Druckman - Framing Theory.......................................................................................................38
Benford & Snow - Framing Processes and Social Movements...................................................................40
Lecture 10: Ethnicity & Immigration as Mobilizers................................................................41
10.1 Definitions....................................................................................................................................41
10.2 Natives’ reactions to immigration.................................................................................................41
Koopmans & Statham..................................................................................................................................41
Stockemer - Structural Data on Immigration or Immigration Perceptions?................................................42
Lubbers & Coenders - nationalistic attitude and voting for radical right....................................................42
Andretta & Pavan - Mapping Protest on the Refugee Crisis.......................................................................42
10.3 Participation of Ethnic Minorities.................................................................................................42
Bloemraad & Schonwalder..........................................................................................................................43
Michon & Vermeulen - Explaining different trajectories............................................................................43
Lecture 11: Inequality in Political Participation......................................................................44
11.1 Sources.........................................................................................................................................44
11.2 Mechanisms..................................................................................................................................45
Lancee & Van de Werfhorst - income inequality and participation............................................................46
Kern, Marien & Hooghe - Economic crisis and levels of PP in Europe......................................................46
Grasso & Giugni - PP and Economic Crisis................................................................................................47
Lecture 12: Non Participation....................................................................................................47
12.1 Trends...........................................................................................................................................47
Van Biezen et al. - Going, Going, Gone?....................................................................................................47


,Fieldhouse et al. (2007). Electoral participation of young people in Europe..............................................47
12.2 Wood & Flinders..................................................................................................................................48






, Interim 1: Week 1 en 2
LECTURE 1: INTRO
1.1 Intro
Two types of Political Participation:
• Electoral: voting, contacting officials, donating, campaigning
• Non-electoral: petitions, mass demonstrations, boycotts, violence; via social movements.


‘Political participation’ is often seen as voting, but voting actually has a downward turnout. Though protests
are getting bigger worldwide. Protests come and go in a flow. The Diamond Model shows different ways of
citizens to participate in politics. Either through elections, or through social movements.




2.2 Van Deth, A Conceptual Map of Political Participation
Defining political participation. Four main variants, one of them non-political.


Conge - definition: ‘individual or collective action at the national or local level that supports or opposes
decisions regarding allocation of public goods’. Saying we’re comparing apples to pears. Categorizations:
1. Forms: active - passive
2. Behaviour: aggressive - nonaggressive
3. Objects: structural - nonstructural
4. Aims: Governmental - nongovernmental
5. Actions: mobilized - voluntary
6. Outcomes: intended - unintended

‘Too many definitions / categorizations of political participations:
- These definitions are too time-period dependent (now vs 30 years ago)
- Actual conclusions about development of political participation over time difficult to draw
- How to deal with expansion modes (internet).
Operational Concepts Types and commonly used labels Specimens of typical modes

Minimalist Definition: Pol. Partici- Conventional, institutional, elite-di- Voting, budget forms, party member-
pation-I rected action, formal ship, contacting politicians

Targeted Definition: Pol. Participa- Unconventional, non-institutional, Signing a petition, demonstrating,
tion-II protest, political action, elite- blockades. Painting slogans, flash
Target: government/politics/state challinging action, everyday activism mobs

Targeted Definition: Pol. Participa- Civic engagement, social participa- Volunteering, reclaim-the-street-party
tion III tion, community participation
Aimed at: problems or community

Motivational Definition: Pol. Parti- Expressive p.p., individualized col- Political consumerism, boycotts. buy-
cipation-IV lective action, personalized cotts, etc.

-

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all 2 reviews
3 year ago

4 year ago

2,5

2 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
1
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
cathonderstal Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
124
Member since
8 year
Number of followers
103
Documents
0
Last sold
10 months ago

3,9

17 reviews

5
6
4
6
3
3
2
1
1
1

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can immediately select a different document that better matches what you need.

Pay how you prefer, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card or EFT and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions