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Bartley, Tim; Child, Curtis – Social Forces, 2011
How do social movements influence corporations? Recent work suggests that movements can inflict material damage on their targets and shape categories of evaluation in organizational fields. Extending these ideas, we examine the effects of anti-sweatshop campaigns on sales, stock performance, reputation and specialized ratings of U.S. firms, using…
Descriptors: Corporations, Business, Regression (Statistics), Evaluation
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McVeigh, Rory; Cunningham, David – Social Forces, 2012
Research on the consequences of social movements typically aims to identify determinants of success or to draw attention to ways that social movements are able to secure new benefits for constituents by gaining concessions from political authorities. Yet social movements, even those that are ultimately defeated, may have an enduring impact on the…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Group Behavior, Social Change, Homicide
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Tsutsui, Kiyoteru – Social Forces, 2009
This study proposes a theoretical framework to understand how nations deal with collective memories of perpetration of severe human rights violations, which do not ft comfortably in any national master narrative but have become increasingly difficult to ignore. Building on studies of collective memory, the framework explicates how initial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Memory, Group Behavior, Victims of Crime
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Hawdon, James; Ryan, John – Social Forces, 2011
Numerous researchers discuss the solidarity-producing effects of crime, natural disasters and mass tragedies; however, there is much we do not understand about the processes involved in the phenomena. We specify the social relationships that "generate" and "sustain" solidarity by building on Hunter's descriptions of the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, School Safety, Violence, School Security
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Butts, Carter T.; Rode, David C. – Social Forces, 2007
We define a "hot potato" to be a good that may be traded a finite number of times, but which becomes a bad if and when it can no longer be exchanged. We describe a game involving such goods, and show that non-acceptance is a unique subgame perfect Nash equilibrium for rational egoists. Contrastingly, experiments with human subjects show…
Descriptors: Play, Participant Characteristics, Value Judgment, Economic Factors
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Auyero, Javier; Moran, Timothy Patrick – Social Forces, 2007
This article combines a statistical analysis with qualitative research to investigate the dynamics of collective violence in one of its most recurrent forms--the food riot. Using an original dataset collected by the authors on 289 food riot episodes occurring in Argentina in December 2001, the article argues for the need to dissect the local,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Politics, Group Behavior, Violence
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Gross, Michael L. – Social Forces, 1994
Data from 174 persons involved in French and Dutch community rescues of Jews during World War II revealed personal motivations based either on material, social, and religious norms or on social justice, each set linked to a distinct cognitive structure. However, organizational and supportive context factors were more significant than personal…
Descriptors: Community Action, Community Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Group Behavior