Resources

Last Updated: August 7, 2025

The Many Impacts of Social Movements:
Fifty Years after William Gamson’s The Strategy of Social Protest

CBSM Mini-Conference at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management

Wieboldt Hall, 339 E Chicago Street Chicago, IL, 60611, on August 7 and 8, 2025 (click HERE to register)

Initially, most social movement research concerned what drove mobilization and why people participated in social movements.  William Gamson’s 1975 work stood out in seeking to address whether social movements were able to gain influence and why.  Although slow to take this lead, scholars over the last quarter century have turned attention to the potential influence of social movements and their actions over a variety of important social outcomes.  Early work concerned movements’ political and policy influence, but since then, research has expanded to other potential sites of impact.  These include social movements’ influence on nonpolitical institutions, such as business, medicine, science, religion, education, the police, and the military, movements’ cultural impacts on public discourse, media, collective memory, public opinion, and art, movements’ influence on other movements, including on broader tactical repertoires, and on movement participants’ later activism.

To take stock of these advances and highlight new research, the Collective Behavior and Social Movements (CBSM) section of the American Sociological Association is holding a mini-conference at the downtown campus of Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Chicago, Illinois, on August 7 and 8, 2025 – the two days immediately prior to opening of the American Sociological Association’s national meeting in Chicago. (The CBSM section day is the first day of the conference.) Centered on the many kinds of influence that social movements have had and what drives that influence, the workshop will be organized into plenary sessions, thematic sessions, and roundtables.

Among the plenary speakers will be Aldon Morris, Francesca Polletta, Steven Epstein, Myra Marx Ferree, Kenneth Andrews, Donatella Della Porta, and Brayden King.  There will be a question-and-answer session with editors of several journals, including  Mobilization, Social Movement Studies, Social Science Computer Review, and Science Advances, as well as series editors from Cambridge University Press and Amsterdam University Press. The paper sessions will include panels on the impacts of movements on politics and policy, on non-political institutions, on news and social media, on entertainment media and art, on collective memory, on collective identity, on activist biographies, in authoritarian polities, and in China and Hong Kong.  Other panels include ones focused on strategy, methods, revolutions and rebellions, and the impacts of gender-based movements, right-wing movements, and Black Lives Matter.

The mini-conference is being sponsored in part by Northwestern University and the University of California-Irvine Jack W. Peltason Center for the Study of Democracy.


SCHEDULE

Thursday, August 7

8:00 – 9:00 am: Check in, Coffee

9:00 – 10:30 am: Plenary session 1, Room 147

Edwin Amenta, University of California, Irvine, “Introduction: The Many Impacts of Social Movements”

Donatella della Porta, Scuola Normale Superiore, “Gaining Momentum: Time Intensification as Protest Outcome”

Aldon D. Morris, Northwestern University, “Reflections on the Civil Rights Movement: From Martin Luther King, Jr. to Donald J. Trump”

10:30 – 10:40 am: Break

10:40 am – 12:20 pm: Concurrent Panel Sessions

Social Movements’ Strategies I
Presider/Discussant:  James M. Jasper, City University of New York
Room 105                                                        

Jonathan Smucker, University of California, BerkeleyAlienated or Rational? An Integrated, ‘Neoclassical’ Approach to Occupy Wall Street
Tom Einhorn, University of British ColumbiaHow Master Frames Bridge Protest Cycles
Rajkamal Singh, New York UniversityHow the Divided Organize Collectively: The Paradoxical Effects of Mobilizing Structural Networks on Coalition Formation
Alice Mattoni, University of BolognaActivists’ Digital Strategic Capacities and Social Movement Outcomes

Movement Impacts on Art and Entertainment Media     
Presider/Discussant: Francesca Polletta, University of California, Irvine
Room 109                                

Levi Mitzen, Florida State UniversityRage For the Machine: MAGA Hip Hop and Negotiating the Populist Master Frame
Danial Vahabli, Stonybrook UniversityMentioning the Unmentionable: Perception of Opportunities, Agency, Emotions, and Identity in Iranian Resistance Rap Prior and During the Women, Life, Freedom Uprisings
Julia Dessauer, Indiana UniversityCancellations and Comebacks: Sexual Harassment Accusations and Career Trajectories in the Entertainment Industry
Celine Liao, University of WashingtonMovie Screening Groups as Cinematic Counterpublic: The Making of the Feminist Movie Era in China

Movement Impacts on Non-Political Institutions   
Presider/Discussant: Brayden G. King, Northwestern University
Room 348                                             

Jesse Yeh, Northwestern UniversityIntersectional Backlash: Gender, Race, and School Politics
Matthew Baggetta, Brad R. Fulton, and Julie A. Beasley, Indiana UniversityA Nation of Organizers or Mobilizers?: How Social Movements Influence the Collective Action Practices of Everyday Institutions
Saber Khani, Boston CollegeFrom Fields to Streets: Oil Industry and Petro Protests
Oscar Bueno, University of Texas, El PasoAlternative Economies and Artistic Resistance in the Borderlands: Market and Cultural Practices in the Juárez–El Paso Region.

Movement Influence and Research Methods
Presider/Discussant: Jennifer Earl, University of Delaware
Room 309

Weijun Yuan and Edwin Amenta, University of California, Irvine, and Neal Caren, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillHow to Code Texts with Generative Large Language Models: Analyzing the News of Social Movement Organizations
Tina Law, University of California, DavisMired in Multivalence: Municipal Liability and the Post-1960s City
Edmund Cheng, University of Hong KongDo Conspiracy Theories Drive Collective Action? Cross-national Evidence from LLM Models and Experimental Analysis

12:20-1:20: Lunch [Room TBA]

1:20-3:00: Concurrent Panel Sessions 

Media, Movements, and Strategic Shifts
Presider/Discussant: Pamela Oliver, University of Wisconsin
Room 107   

Deana A. Rohlinger, Florida State University

The Death of the Mainstream SMO? Curating Conservatives in The Attention Economy

Maxwell Roberts, University of California, Irvine

Breaking Bad News: How Conservative and Right-wing Media Manage Coverage of Extremist-Right Movements’

Danial Vahabli, Stony Brook University

Digital Boomerangs: Pitfalls of Transnational Advocacy and Affordable Alternatives in the Global South

Braxton Brewington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Quadruple B: How Leftist Social Movements Interact with Media

Social Media, Platforms, and Political Participation
Presider/Discussant: Neal Caren, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Room 309

Devo Probol, University of PennsylvaniaPower to the Players: Digital Activism and Rethinking the Stages of a Social Movement
YJ Chae, Rutgers UniversityFrom Grievances to Threats: Family Change, Fathers’ Grievances, and Threat-Making in Men’s Rights Movement
Yi-Cheng/Ken Hsieh, McGill UniversityMapping Disruption: How the Media Perceive and Rank Protest Tactics 
Levi Mitzen, Grant William Bailey, Kyle Rose, Yuki Maynor, Deana A. Rohlinger, and E. Ashby Plant, Florida State UniversityIs Social Media Really to Blame? Young Adults, News Media, and Political and Civic Engagement.

Impacts of Progressive Movements, Gender Politics   
Presider/Discussant: David S. Meyer, University of California, Irvine
Room 109                                        

Alejandro Márquez, University of South Florida Deter-care Chain: How the State Creates, and the Immigrant Rights Movement Addresses, the Migrant Care Crisis on the US-Mexico Border
Jo Reger, Oakland Univerity and Suzanne Staggenborg, University of PittsburghProcesses of Emergence and Submergence in the US Women’s Movement
Roberta S. Pamplona, University of TorontoDefending Feminism Through Intersectionality: Feminist Strategies Amid Right-Wing Movements in Brazil
Kristopher Velasco, Princeton UniversityThe Logics of Queer Justice: Disaggregating Transnational Pathways for Recognizing Homosexual, Sexual Orientation, and Gender Identity-Based Rights

Rebellions & Revolutions
Presider/Discussant: Jeff Goodwin, New York University
Room 105                                                                                      

Samson Yuen, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityThe Age of Mass Revolutions
Gilad Wenig, University of California, Los Angeles and Neil Ketchley, University of OxfordStaffing the Revolutionary State
Tina Law, University of California, DavisDefining Riots: The Racialized Origins and Evolution of “Riot” as an American Legal Concept, 1901-2021
Sean Terence Boylan, Purdue UniversityPolitical Polarization and Violence in the US

Movement Impacts on Politics and Policy I
Presider/Discussant: Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur, Rhode Island College
Room 348                                                 

Jeffrey Broadbent, University of MinnesotaHow Social Movements Affect Policy Outcomes: Political Process as Complex Dynamical System
Luis Rubén González Márquez, University of California, MercedBeyond Success or Failure: Hegemony and the Direct Political Effects of Contention Campaigns Against Renewable Energy Megaprojects
Katrin Uba and Jenny Jansson, Uppsala UniversityA Threat to Protest as a Winning Strategy? The Experience of the Swedish Labour Movement
Yaniv Ron-el, University of ChicagoSuccesses and Failures in Social Movements: Toward a Theoretical Agenda
Arman Azedi and Dana Fisher, American UniversityPalestine Advocates in the Liberal-Progressive Activist Universe

3:00 – 3:15 pm: Break

3:15 – 4:45 pm: Plenary 2, Room 147

Steven Epstein, Northwestern University, “Cultural Authority and Lay Expertise: How Social Movements are Transforming Health and Biomedicine”

Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin, “Political Demography and Political Identity”

Kenneth T. Andrews, Washington University in St. Louis, Neal Caren, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Rashawn Ray, University of Maryland, “The Paradox of Reform: Protests, Policies, and Police Killings in America”

Friday, August 8

8:30 – 9:00 am: Coffee, Breakfast

9:00 – 10:30 am: Plenary session 1 Room 147

Meet the Editors: Neal Caren (Mobilization), Katrin Uba (Social Movement Studies), Jennifer Earl (Science Advances), Deana Rohlinger (Social Science Computer Review), David Meyer (Cambridge U. Press), and James Jasper (Oxford U. Press, Amsterdam U. Press). Moderated by Braxton Brewington, University of North Carolina.
*
This session will allow conference members the opportunity to ask questions and learn more about the publishing process.

10:30-10:40:  Break

10:40 am – 12:20 pm: Concurrent Panel Sessions

Social Movements’ Impacts in Mainland China and Hong Kong
Presider/Discussant: Lynette Ong, University of Toronto, and Samson Yuen, Hong Kong Baptist University
Room 309

Jeff T. Sheng, St. Mary’s UniversityThe Double-Edged Sword of Anonymity: Repression and Resistance After the 2019-2020 Hong Kong Protests
Samson Yuen, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityRegulating Violence from within: Internal Brakes in a Leaderless Movement
David Xu, University of California, BerkeleyThe Platform of Contention: How Platform Algorithms Spark Militant Strikes in China’s Gig Economy
Lynette Ong, University of TorontoThe Secret Police Among Us: Diverging Instruments of Mass Repression in China and the Soviet Union

Movement Impacts on Collective Memory 
Presider/Discussant: Hajar Yazdiha, University of Southern California
Room 348                                                            

David Cunningham, Washington University in St. LouisContesting Confederate Memory: Removed Monuments and Racialized Inequality in the Contemporary U.S. South
Matt Coetzee, University of Notre DameContingent Memory Activation and Civil Repair: Collective Memory and Crisis Response in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Nancy Whittier, Smith College“Has it Ever Been This Bad Before?” Collective Movement Memory as an Outcome of and Contributor to Mobilization
Ellen Berrey, University of Toronto, Caleb Dawson, University of California, Merced,  Kendal Kandasamy, University of Toronto, Alex Hanna, Distributed AI Research InstituteCampus Challenges to Racist Memorials and University Administrations’ Responses in the United States and Canada in the 2010s
Jaleh Jalili, Rice UniversityPolitics of Mourning: Gravestones as Cultural Objects of Social Movements

Movement Impacts on Politics and Policy II 
Presider/Discussant: Edwin Amenta, University of California, Irvine
Room 105                                                           

Katrin Uba, Uppsala University and Cassandra Engeman, Stockholm UniversityDo Protests Matter for Court Decisions? Environmental Justice and Social Movements In Sweden
Paul Almeida, University of California, MercedThe Three Trajectories of Climate Action
Catharina O’Donnell, Harvard UniversityHow Movements Shape Political Party Organizations from the Inside
Jordan Banick, Independent Scholar; Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur, Rhode Island College; Robert W. Widell, Jr., University of Rhode IslandLooking Back, Looking Forward: Launching the Project, Sharing Our Memories

Biographical Impacts of Movements 
Presider/Discussant: Marco Giugni, University of Geneva, and Chandra Russo, Colgate University
Room 107                                                              

Matthew Borus, Binghamton UniversityThe Impact of Disruptive Protest on Protesters Themselves: A Case Study
Marco Giugni, University of Geneva, and Maria Grasso, Queen Mary University of LondonThe Short-Term Biographical Consequences of Youth Political Participation
Ye Joon Lee, Northwestern UniversityCivic Engagement & Entrepreneurship
Chandra Russo, Colgate University“I Am Of and From Here”: The Biographical Impacts of Antiracist Organizing in the Poor White US South

Media Coverage and Legitimacy
Presider/Discussant: Deana A. Rohlinger, Florida State University
Room 109                                                                

Jozie Nummi and Amorette Young, Purdue UniversityBeyond the News: Social Media and the Struggle for Protest Legitimacy. 
Yao Li and Huixuan Wu, Florida State UniversityDisaggregating Media Framing: Advancing Media-Movement Studies Using Network Clustering
Pamela Oliver, Chaeyoon Lim, Anna Milewski, Erin Gaede University of WisconsinNews Coverage by and for Whom? Comparing Coverage of Black Protests in Mainstream Newswires and Local and Nonlocal Black Newspapers
Didem Türkoğlu, Kadir Has UniversityStudent Protests, Social Media, and Illiberal Political Change: A Case Study of Turkey
Neal Caren, Braxton Brewington, Marty Kennedy, University of North CarolinaInsert Quote Here: Selective Modulation in Protest Coverage

12:20 – 1:20 pm: Lunch

1:20 – 3:00 pm: Concurrent Panel Sessions

Reforming Authoritarian Polities
Presider/Discussant: Dana Moss, University of Notre Dame
Room 107                                                                                  

Saber Khani and Mohammed Ali Kadivar, Boston CollegeCompliance on Campus
Nader Andrawos, Harvard UniversityPrison as Public Schooling and Public Life: Imprisonment as Ethical Formation within Social
Sarah Hernandez, New College of FloridaIs Resistance Futile? [about being faculty at Florida college]
Defne Over, Texas A&M UniversitySustaining Resistance: Collective Memory, Emotions, and Democratic Mass Mobilization in Turkey

The Impacts of Black Lives Matter  
Presider/Discussant: Kenneth T. Andrews, Washington University in St. Louis
Room 109                                                                             

Anna DalCortivo, University of MinnesotaThe Five Assumptions: Police Abolition and Community-Based Justice Approaches at George Floyd Square.”
Pierce Greenberg, Thomas V. Maher, Rhys Hester, and Kylah Rainey, Clemson UniversityDo Protests Influence Racial Disparities in Criminal Sentencing? Investigating the Impact of the George Floyd Protests on Sentencing Outcomes
Jaleh Jalili, Rice UniveristyMovements, Urban Contexts, and Place-based Identities: The Case of Black Lives Matter Protests in Portland
Sarah Gaby and Firdaous Sbai, University of North Carolina, WilmingtonThe Long Shadow of History: Historical Contextualization of Movement Outcomes

Movement Impacts on Collective Identity   
Presider/Discussant: Ann Mische, University of Notre Dame
Room 105          

Eunchong Cho, University of California, San Diego

Rethinking Youth Movements: Expanding Mannheim’s Generation Theory for Youth Identity Movements

Youbin Kang, Cornell University

Between the TV and the Barricade: Dramaturgy and Recognition Politics in Subway Strikes

Nathan Tsang, University of Southern California

Doing Politics Nonpolitically: Explaining How Cultural Projects Afford Diasporic Identity

Jeff Sheng, St. Mary’s University

Online Affordances for Collective Identity in Social Movements for LGBT Military Inclusion

Social Movements’ Strategies II–
Presider/Discussant: Kristen Miller, City University of New York
Room 309 

Marcel Paret, University of Utah, and Zachary Levenson, Florida International University

Blackness as Movement Strategy

Yeryeng Choi, University of California, Irvine

How Activists Carry On: The Two Sides of Group Ties and the Role of Coercive Emotions

Jeff L. Feng, Northwestern University

The Shame and Disappointment of Environmental Justice Movements

Gavin Riley, Vanderbilt University

Lavender or Beige?: How the Human Rights Campaign Strategically Frames Gay Identity

Right Movement Influence
Presider/Discussant: Rory McVeigh, University of Notre Dame
Room 348                                                                                      

Esther Hernández-Medina, Pomona CollegeThe Anti-gender and Anti-LGTBQ Right-Wing Backlash in the Dominican Republic
Levi Mitzen et al., Florida State UniversityInfluencing Regret: Global Anti-Feminism and Mobilizing Feelings of Regret Using Social Media.
Adam Burston, The Ohio State UniversityHegemonic Diversity: How Right-Wing Activists from Marginalized Backgrounds Interpret Their Movements’ Past and Shape Its Future
Didem Türkoğlu, Kadir Has UniversityFar-Right Movement Parties and Higher Education Policy
Eitan Alimi, Hebrew University of JerusalemMaking Relational Sense of the Settlement Movement’s Success

3 – 3:15 pm: Break

3:15 – 4:45 pm: Plenary 2: Room 147

Brayden G. King, Northwestern University, Protests, Power, and Influence: Movements’ Transformational Potential

Francesca Polletta, University of California, Irvine, When Social Movements Change Common Sense

4:45 pm: Program Adjourns for the Day