ONLINE FIRST
In this TSQ article, Gabriela Gonzalez Vaillant examines how student movements balance considerations related to leverage, visibility, and repression when making decisions about strategies and tactics.
Read more at bit.ly/4ezjKaA
Posts by The Sociological Quarterly
1/ New article out in @socquarterly.bsky.social: “What is Left After the Protest Wave? Tracing Generational Patterns of Political Engagement in the Wake of Chile’s Student Movement” www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
NEW IN TSQ
Kayla Preston examines the process by which some young people become involved in right-wing organizations following their exposure to far-right YouTube content during adolescence.
Read more at bit.ly/4mgk6oB
NEW IN TSQ
Kayla Preston examines the process by which some young people become involved in right-wing organizations following their exposure to far-right YouTube content during adolescence.
Read more at bit.ly/4mgk6oB
ONLINE FIRST
In this TSQ article, Gazela Pudar Draško and colleagues examine a recent wave of student-led protests in Serbia and describe how direct democratic practices—participatory plenums—emerged as adaptive responses to political constraints in a hybrid regime.
Read more at bit.ly/4dyDCKK
Volume 67, issue 2, of TSQ is now LIVE, featuring articles by @cihantugal.bsky.social, @jonathansmucker.bsky.social, @jcallahanbryant.bsky.social, @katherinefurl.bsky.social, @haphazardsoc.bsky.social, @criminovelist.bsky.social, @chinyereagbai.bsky.social, and more!
Read it at bit.ly/4m4hdXD
Volume 67, issue 2, of TSQ is now LIVE, featuring articles by @cihantugal.bsky.social, @jonathansmucker.bsky.social, @jcallahanbryant.bsky.social, @katherinefurl.bsky.social, @haphazardsoc.bsky.social, @criminovelist.bsky.social, @chinyereagbai.bsky.social, and more!
Read it at bit.ly/4m4hdXD
NEW IN TSQ
Annika Wilcox and Neeraj Rajasekar examine tech employees' perceptions of organizational diversity initiatives.
Read more at bit.ly/4s9LCW3
ONLINE FIRST
New in TSQ: Kevin Steinmetz and Edward Green examine how firms in the electric guitar industry have navigated intellectual property protections to manage their relationships with other firms in a market space.
Read more at bit.ly/4s8R8s6
ONLINE FIRST
New in TSQ: Cristóbal Karle, Felipe Sánchez-Barría, and René Canales Sellés use the case of the 1980s Chilean University Student Movement to address questions about social movement institutionalization and organization building under authoritarian regimes.
Read more at bit.ly/4bM2cVV
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Sadie Dempsey (sadiemdempsey.bsky.social) draws on four years of ethnographic fieldwork and 90 in-depth interviews to examine how civic associations facilitate political socialization.
Read more at bit.ly/4dou2d6
ONLINE FIRST
Nabil Tueme examines the different types of stories that undocumented students and their citizen allies share in support of undocumented student rights.
Read more at bit.ly/4cQgAP4
New study. We had adults place historical figures on the left-right ideological spectrum. Folks most often place history's villains (Hitler, Stalin, etc) as extreme examples of their opponents. But they place heroes (Jesus, MLK, Lincoln) are on their own team. 1/4 www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Celine Liao examines how feminist student activists in China navigate illiberal political and academic opportunity structures.
Read more at bit.ly/4bHqznJ
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Katy Habr examines how the proximity of traditional grocery stores in Southern California to platform firms is impacting job security and working conditions for employees.
Read more at bit.ly/4ukDdBn
New paper! I use text and image data from UNESCO’s official website to analyze global asymmetries in the ways animals contribute to the “universal value” of Natural Heritage Sites.
NEW IN TSQ
In this TSQ article, Andrew McCumber (@ahmccumber.bsky.social) examines the role of nonhuman animals in the valuation of “natural” sites on UNESCO’s World Heritage List.
Read more at bit.ly/40Fgour
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Daisy Verduzco Reyes and Felicia Cruz-Fernandez examine how Latino millennial student activists navigated debates over the meaning and relevance of the “Chicano” label in the late 2000s.
Read more at bit.ly/409VDqG
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Daisy Verduzco Reyes and Felicia Cruz-Fernandez examine how Latino millennial student activists navigated debates over the meaning and relevance of the “Chicano” label in the late 2000s.
Read more at bit.ly/409VDqG
NEW IN TSQ
Ingrid Nelson, Jeremiah Brown, and Nicole Nigro employ racialized organization and inhabited institutionalism theories to explore how athletes and non-athletes experienced campus life before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Free to read through the end of April at bit.ly/4aFLDeR
NEW IN TSQ
Ingrid Nelson, Jeremiah Brown, and Nicole Nigro employ racialized organization and inhabited institutionalism theories to explore how athletes and non-athletes experienced campus life before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Free to read through the end of April at bit.ly/4aFLDeR
ONLINE FIRST
In this new open-access TSQ article, Mariana Amorim, Megan Doherty Bea, and Asude Aydagul offer a new perspective on why so many people use payday loan services.
Read more at bit.ly/4r1tpJL
Hmmmm this looks like a good one for next semester’s public health class.
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Chinyere Agbai, Jennifer W. Bouek, and Thomas Marlow examine how a neighborhood’s poverty trajectory shape its likelihood of social service organization deprivation.
Read more at bit.ly/4cbzgIM
ONLINE FIRST
New in TSQ: Isaiah Cohen and Mark Schafer show that different kinds of school-to-family communications prompt different forms of parental engagement in education.
Read more at bit.ly/4cliI0Q
The first paper from a years-long collaboration with an incredible mentor & co-author, @ktandrews.bsky.social! In it, we descriptively detail recent (complex) developments in college activism in the U.S. from 2017 to 2014, noting several instances that defy media & political discourse.
ONLINE FIRST
In this open-access TSQ article, Kenneth Andrews and Khoi Ngo examine the scope, issues, and disruptiveness of campus protest in the United States from 2017 through 2024.
Read more at bit.ly/3O2spr7
ONLINE FIRST
In this new TSQ article, Cihan Tuğal (@cihantugal.bsky.social), Jonathan Smucker, and Kip Roberts examine how emotions shape boundary work among populists and anti-populists within the Republican and Democratic parties.
Read more at bit.ly/4cg6ir2
This was a great presentation last year; highly encourage reading if you weren’t at MSS last year.
ONLINE FIRST
In her presidential address to the Midwest Sociological Society, Jennifer Pearson describes what sociologists can learn from scholarship on queer joy.
Read more at bit.ly/4tke2OT