基本信息
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职业迁徙
个人简介
Research Area
Knowledge, Culture & Power
Research
My overarching research agenda bridges the subfields of social movements, political sociology, and social psychology (particularly the study of identity).
This research is the basis of my first book, Patterns of Protest (Stanford University Press, 2012), two edited special issues of the American Behavioral Scientist, and articles that have appeared in journals such as Social Forces, Sociological Perspectives, the International Journal of Comparative Sociology, the Canadian Review of Sociology, the Journal of Civil Society, Social Movement Studies and Mobilization.
I am currently completing final edits to my second research monograph, Keeping the March Alive (Under Contract, New York University Press). This book compares 35 Indivisible groups in 10 US cities that were founded right after the first Women’s March in 2017. I follow these groups for 2 years in order to understand what explains how groups mobilized and which groups were able to survive over time. This comparative analysis allows for a better understanding of how groups respond to their local contexts when making decisions about how and when to mobilize. This research was funded by a 2018 SSHRC Insight Grant.
Knowledge, Culture & Power
Research
My overarching research agenda bridges the subfields of social movements, political sociology, and social psychology (particularly the study of identity).
This research is the basis of my first book, Patterns of Protest (Stanford University Press, 2012), two edited special issues of the American Behavioral Scientist, and articles that have appeared in journals such as Social Forces, Sociological Perspectives, the International Journal of Comparative Sociology, the Canadian Review of Sociology, the Journal of Civil Society, Social Movement Studies and Mobilization.
I am currently completing final edits to my second research monograph, Keeping the March Alive (Under Contract, New York University Press). This book compares 35 Indivisible groups in 10 US cities that were founded right after the first Women’s March in 2017. I follow these groups for 2 years in order to understand what explains how groups mobilized and which groups were able to survive over time. This comparative analysis allows for a better understanding of how groups respond to their local contexts when making decisions about how and when to mobilize. This research was funded by a 2018 SSHRC Insight Grant.
研究兴趣
论文共 49 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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Catherine Corrigall-Brown, Benjamin Abrams
SOCIAL FORCESno. 4 (2024)
SOCIAL FORCES (2023)
Max Chewinski,Catherine Corrigall‐Brown
The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movementspp.1-5, (2022)
KEEPING THE MARCH ALIVE: How Grassroots Activism Survived Trump's Americapp.142-161, (2022)
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KEEPING THE MARCH ALIVE: How Grassroots Activism Survived Trump's Americapp.1-+, (2022)
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KEEPING THE MARCH ALIVE: How Grassroots Activism Survived Trump's Americapp.54-84, (2022)
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The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movementspp.1-5, (2022)
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Julia Goldman‐Hasbun,Catherine Corrigall‐Brown
The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movementspp.1-7, (2022)
KEEPING THE MARCH ALIVE: How Grassroots Activism Survived Trump's Americapp.85-118, (2022)
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