Back to search

Breaking the mold: the changing modularity of protest forms during cycles of contention

DSEID
DSEID-000-5011434
DOI
10.1093/sf/soag048
Journal
Social Forces
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Published
2026-5-14
Status
metadata_only

Abstract

Abstract One crucial decision that every group of protesters needs to make concerns the forms of action through which they want to convey their claims. While repertoires of contention can vary greatly across different sociopolitical contexts, we know little about why some protest forms may acquire or lose prominence within the same polity over relatively short periods. By applying a novel multimodal network analysis framework to an original protest event dataset covering political contention in Spain between 2007 and 2014 during the Great Recession, this research explores how the modularity of protest forms—that is, their transferability to different circumstances of contention—evolves in the short term. Our analyses demonstrate that the repertoire of contention becomes more flexible as the cycle unfolds, while political opportunities present weak and asymmetric effects on the transferability of different tactics, refining expectations from classic theories of contentious politics in several important ways.

Metadata is indexed. Open-access discovery has not completed for this record yet.

Publisher or DOI landing page

PDF

No local PDF is available.

GROBID Extracted text; discontinued.

This text is generated from TEI extraction for accessibility, search, and TTS. Formulas, tables, figures, page layout, and references may not perfectly match the original PDF.

No accessible text representation is available. The text extraction service has been discontinued for the time being. If you require this service, for accessibility or any other reason, please submit an issue/request on this page.

Metadata

Title
Breaking the mold: the changing modularity of protest forms during cycles of contention
Delta ID
DSEID-000-5011434
Authors
Alejandro Ciordia, Martín Portos
Abstract source
crossref
Source URL
None
Access
closed_or_uncertain
Licence
unknown
PDF SHA-256
TEI SHA-256
GROBID

Issues

No public issues have been filed for this DOI.

Submit an issue

Record history

WhenEventFieldOldNew
2026-06-18 19:37:53.011249+00:00identifier_assignedDSEIDDSEID-000-5011434