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Beyerlein, Kraig; Andrews, Kenneth T. – Social Forces, 2008
This article examines why some black Southerners but not others were politically active during the early stages of the civil rights movement. Using a survey of more than 600 black Southerners in 1961, we investigate whether perceptions about opportunity or threat, politicized social capital and individual orientations toward social change shaped…
Descriptors: African American Community, Civil Rights, Voting, Social Change
Brown, R. Khari – Social Forces, 2006
This study employs a resource mobilization model to explain racial differences in congregation-based political activism. The fewer resources (i.e., members, income, clergy leadership, civic ties) that black congregations possess relative to white congregations largely accounts for racial differences in congregation-based lobbying and protest…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Activism, Models, Resources

Danigelis, Nicholas L. – Social Forces, 1977
Takes issue with the notion that black political activity can be explained either by an isolation, an indirect effects, or an ethnic community argument. Suggests, rather, that a theory of political climate, incorporating arguments from all three theories, best accounts for the variability in black political participation levels from one time and…
Descriptors: Activism, Blacks, Cultural Isolation, History
Winning Woman Suffrage One Step at a Time: Social Movements and the Logic of the Legislative Process
King, Brayden G.; Cornwall, Marie; Dahlin, Eric C. – Social Forces, 2005
We describe a theory of legislative logic. This logic is based on the observation that each succeeding stage of the legislative process has increasingly stringent rules and becomes more consequential. This logic unevenly distributes the influence of social movements across the legislative process. Social movements should have less influence at…
Descriptors: United States History, Legislators, Logical Thinking, Females