RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My research on the 1960s civil rights movement found a key way protests influence politics is through media. I’m grateful that…
RT @owasow: @statesdj A more detailed thread on how coverage matters, here: https://t.co/ZjVz4ywMCN
RT @delong: @owasow https://t.co/rjP9HckAWn In America, at least in the 1960s, non-violent protests worked 1/
RT @owasow: For the full analysis, below are links to the final paper and an ungated pre-print: Final version: https://t.co/zzvvPTcgoP Un…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
My primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overview of that work, see: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
@Theophite @nberlat @cd_hooks https://t.co/DDrOcONhh2 Per the work of @owasow: violent or destructive protest is generally counter-effective with respect to achieving the political goals of the protestors. The most politically effective direct action is pe
@DavidPoe223 You might also find this thread interesting:
RT @mesynsupreme: @LostInTheMovies @AusSyndicialist Some recent examples of the results of wanton violence. The number of #antifa folk who…
@LostInTheMovies @AusSyndicialist Some recent examples of the results of wanton violence. The number of #antifa folk who dismiss the innocents, incl PoC, harmed in barbarism are a large part of why I walked away from the left. Which brings me to the backl
The Civil Rights Movement had rational, assertively peaceful goals & were making progress b/c of such, getting the majority on board. Then the mess & wanton violence kicked up, & caused the (justified) backlash. 🙂 Enter Nixon, etc... https://t
@HarambeTheMac @coloring_book The Civil Rights Movement had rational, assertively peaceful goals & were making progress b/c of such, getting the majority on board. Then the mess & wanton violence kicked up, & caused the (justified) backlash. 🙂
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
@ImpactForward @mayaaking My pleasure! This thread offers a good overview of the paper: https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: For an overview of my research on political consequences of 1960s civil rights protests, see this thread. In 1968, I find prote…
RT @owasow: For an overview of my research on political consequences of 1960s civil rights protests, see this thread. In 1968, I find prote…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
I wonder what Abbie Hoffman would think of this today?
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
@Jenk3 @DataGoddess Agreed, Wallace was a really important factor in 1968. That election is pivotal in my research. https://t.co/MlEU5brcOc
RT @owasow: For an overview of my research on political consequences of 1960s civil rights protests, see this thread. In 1968, I find prote…
For an overview of my research on political consequences of 1960s civil rights protests, see this thread. In 1968, I find protests likely swayed enough voters in key states to shift Electoral College from civil rights candidate to ”law & order” candida
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: Beyond zoning policy (though not unrelated), my primary area of research is on civil rights protests in the 1960s. For an overv…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
@_rafiperez_ @shoe0nhead @VaushV Just read through this thread...
@JCES42099 @shoe0nhead @VaushV That’s not even remotely what I said. Maybe read through this thread:
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
@PublicBearwaves @shoe0nhead @VaushV When peaceful protesters were met with violence, it shifted public opinion towards protesters. When protesters were violent, the opposite happened. Read through this thread.
RT @_cthesavage: @shoe0nhead @VaushV ...
@VaushV I suggest reading through this thread
@shoe0nhead @VaushV ...
@BmoreDoc And, again your analysis treats Black activists as pawns rather thinkers & strategists: “movement leaders were studying the press: how it reacted, what made news, and what did not. One thing was unambiguous: the greater the violence, the bigg
See Medicare for All during the primary.
This is important for understanding now.
@BmoreDoc Paper: ”majority-oriented media are likely to exhibit systematic bias against minority-led movements (Davenport 2009)…” https://t.co/ntorABPjSh https://t.co/yJ8ZX2oF8I
@BmoreDoc Paper: ”Branch (1998, chap. 15), for example, quotes one reporter’s take on a nonviolent civil rights protest in Hattiesburg, MS, “… even an unprecedented picket line was a dull story. ‘In such situations, blood and guts are news’.” https://t.co/
@BmoreDoc Paper: ”Media attention, however, can be sympathetic or hostile. Even presented with similar facts, different reporters and news organizations often structure stories in systematically different ways (Davenport and Litras 2003).” https://t.co/nto
@BmoreDoc Paper: ”Kinder & Kam (2010) find that whether an issue can overcome societal biases to become salient depends significantly “on the ability of the issue to command the public’s limited and fickle attention and on how the particular issue is f
@BmoreDoc Paper: ”I also propose and test a model of agenda seeding in the context of subordinate groups who are assumed to operate under constraints such as discriminatory laws, higher rates of poverty, and *media that exhibit systematic bias* (Davenport
@ReneeLaRoca @SeattlePD Some wisdom in this study. https://t.co/z9d6otpQXF
@owasow Hey Omar you need a new job. #BidenCheated Asst Prof, Princeton Politics. I study protests, statistics & race: 1/ Agenda Seeding https://t.co/OsbIqRkRxi 2/ Race as a Bundle of Sticks https://t.co/63nnWJkZyc
@BmoreDoc @NathanJRobinson Here’s my response to @MarxinHell again with some overlap with your prior argument. https://t.co/sPVPra2dHB
@BmoreDoc @NathanJRobinson Here’s my response to a critique from Heather Ann Thompson that also overlaps a bit with your prior argument: https://t.co/LTGlsd8GZN
@BmoreDoc We agree that this would be worth doing. I have repeatedly engaged with critics. I’m just saying you need to put it in writing first. Here’s my response to @NathanJRobinson making claims similar to those you raised in our previous exchange: http
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
@DailyTacoma @jilanny @drjenradio @SeattlePD Do like reading and listening. https://t.co/z9d6otpQXF
@BmoreDoc For more on what Douglass can teach us about the questions you and others have raised, see this thread: https://t.co/sPVPra2dHB
@BmoreDoc No. African Americans in 1960s lived under brutal conditions but also had enough agency to advocate for themselves and, ultimately, overthrow Jim Crow. This project takes the agency of Black thinkers & activists seriously. Anything less is di
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
Omar offers an interpretation of what they said. But as I noted the last time, the arguments still didn't hold up when you look at what happened (including the 1968 Civil Rights Act and the growth of affirmative action). @BmoreDoc @willwilkinson https://t.
@dropoutnation My paper puts debates between Black thinkers and activists at the center of the analysis. For anyone interested in those debates, theory and evidence, you can read it yourself. The paper is available for free at the American Political Scienc
@BmoreDoc The Black Freedom Struggle has always involved active, heated debates about goals and tactics. My work engages directly with those debates. I welcome @BmoreDoc’s critique but also encourage anyone interested in the larger debate to read the actua
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For anyone interested in my research on the political consequences of civil rights protests in the 1960s, see this thread: http…
RT @owasow: For 15 years, I’ve been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by…