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1

GLAZKOVA, SVETLANA. "The Own—Other Dichotomy in Contemporary Film Discourse as Exemplified by the Icelandic Crime TV Series Trapped." Art and Science of Television 20, no. 3 (2024): 155–77. https://doi.org/10.30628/1994-9529-2024-20.3-155-177.

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The article examines the ways in which collective identity is represented within the “us vs. them” categories in a mass culture genre artistic audiovisual product known as crime series. The material for the analysis is the 2015 Icelandic television crime drama series Trapped, created by Baltasar Kormákur and produced by RVK Studios. The research methodology is a combination of discourse analysis of the audiovisual text, narrative analysis, and a constructivist approach to the formation of collective identities. As a mainstream genre film product, the series represents collective identities, em
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Batey, D. Scott, Xueyuan Dong, Richard P. Rogers, et al. "Time From HIV Diagnosis to Viral Suppression: Survival Analysis of Statewide Surveillance Data in Alabama, 2012 to 2014." JMIR Public Health and Surveillance 6, no. 2 (2020): e17217. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/17217.

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Background Evaluation of the time from HIV diagnosis to viral suppression (VS) captures the collective effectiveness of HIV prevention and treatment activities in a given locale and provides a more global estimate of how effectively the larger HIV care system is working in a given geographic area or jurisdiction. Objective This study aimed to evaluate temporal and geographic variability in VS among persons with newly diagnosed HIV infection in Alabama between 2012 and 2014. Methods With data from the National HIV Surveillance System, we evaluated median time from HIV diagnosis to VS (<200 c
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Dajczak, Wojciech. "Prawo spadkowe vs. sprawiedliwa sukcesja obiektów dziedzictwa kulturowego?" Santander Art and Culture Law Review 7, no. 1 (2021): 39–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/2450050xsnr.21.003.14592.

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The law of inheritance vs. the just succession of the cultural property? Heirless property in European countries is typically inherited by the state. However, the routine application of this rule to assets belonging to victims of the German genocide during WWII continues to raise doubts. The recognition of a moral responsibility towards Holocaust victims in the Terezin Declaration legitimates the international debate on tensions between inheritance law and justice. The lack of a universal model for the succession of heirless Jewish cultural property acknowledged by this Declaration provokes di
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Mitu, Tajnin, Vinila Zachariah, Jason Ray, et al. "Secondary Service Communications to GPs-a Regional Audit." BJPsych Open 9, S1 (2023): S170—S171. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.449.

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AimsThe purpose of the audit was to assess the standard of communication to GPs from secondary mental health services and to ascertain whether the information included in letters to GPs was in accordance with the recommendations of RCPsych and PRSB. The audit cycle was completed by re auditing to identify how the recommendations from the first audit has improved the quality of communication to GPs.MethodsThe audit was conducted on three psychiatric units, in three sites across Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board and clinic letters were studied to identify whether the information was as per
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Cavarretta, Fabrice L. "On the hard problem of selecting bundles of rules: a conceptual exploration of heuristic emergence processes." Management Decision 59, no. 7 (2021): 1598–616. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/md-09-2019-1322.

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PurposeSo far, the simplicity of heuristics has been mostly studied at the rule level. However, actors' bounded rationality implies that small bundles of rules drive behavior. This study thus conducts a conceptual elaboration around such bundling. This leads to reflections on the various processes of heuristic emergence and to qualifications of the respective characteristics of basic heuristic classes.Design/methodology/approachDetermining which rules – out of many possible ones – to select in one's small bundle constitutes a difficult combinatorial problem. Fortunately, past research has demo
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A, Pokhrel, Kafle G, Khanal K, Pyakurel K, Poudel D, and Jha A. "Effect of Dexamethasone as an Additive to Ropivacaine on Duration of Ultrasound Guided Transversus Abdominis Plane Block in Cesarean Section under Spinal Anesthesia." Birat Journal of Health Sciences 9, no. 1 (2024): 39–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.62065/bjhs544.

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Introduction: Dexamethasone is increasingly used as a new adjunct to local anesthetics for prolonging the duration of action in Transversus Abdominis Plane (TAP) block. The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of dexamethasone as an additive to 0.25% ropivacaine in duration of TAP block in patients undergoing cesarean section. Objectives: To compare the effect of dexamethasone in transverse abdominal plane block with respect to its duration for postoperative analgesia in cesarean section under spinal anesthesia. Methodology: This prospective cross sectional study was carried out at Bira
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7

Hoff, Joan. "Agency and Collective Action vs. Diversity and Difference." Journal of Women's History 20, no. 1 (2008): 19–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2008.0000.

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8

Tassone, Adrianna, and Mindi D. Foster. "The Relationship between Dimensions of Collective Action, Introversion/ Extroversion, and Collective Action Endorsement among Women." Contention 9, no. 1 (2021): 31–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2021.090103.

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Given the psychosocial benefits of collective action for minority group members, we explored how the personality trait introversion/extroversion may contribute to current understandings of what motivates collective action among women. Dimensions of collective action that are consistent with introversion (e.g., low risk) were expected to predict greater endorsement of collective action among introverts, whereas dimensions consistent with extroversion (e.g., public) were expected to predict greater endorsement among extroverts. One hundred and seventy-nine women completed an online questionnaire
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Uysal, Mete Sefa, Yasemin Gülsüm Acar, Jose-Manuel Sabucedo, and Huseyin Cakal. "‘To participate or not participate, that’s the question’: The role of moral obligation and different risk perceptions on collective action." Journal of Social and Political Psychology 10, no. 2 (2022): 445–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.5964/jspp.7207.

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The current research investigates whether moral obligation and perceived close vs. distant risks of high vs. moderate risk collective actions are associated with willingness to participate in collective action in the case of Turkey. Two studies were conducted: one with re-placed university students after the July 15, 2016 coup d'état attempt (high-risk context; N₁ = 258) and one with climate strikes (moderate risk context; N₂ = 162). The findings showed that moral obligation predicts collective action in both studies, however, the strength of this relationship is contingent on the level of sub
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Ariyawanshe, I. D. K. S. D., Miho Fujimura, A. H. M. S. W. B. Abeyrathne, and Tsuji Kazunari. "Fostering Collective Action in a Village-Tank Cascade-Based Community in Sri Lanka: An Illusion or Reality?" Sustainability 15, no. 20 (2023): 15168. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su152015168.

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Collective action has inevitable importance for sustainable governance of shared resource systems with interactions across multiple social and spatial scales. Village irrigation tanks in Sri Lanka have been recognized as shared resource systems sustainably managed through the collective action of local communities throughout history. Increased population pressure on shared resources and expanded socio-economic relationships over time have led to extended resource-based interactions between people. This occurred beyond village tanks within the broader scale of Village-Tank-Cascade Systems (VTCS
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Solari, Stefano. "Constitutions for Local Collective Action and Institutional Interdependence." Constitutional Political Economy 15, no. 1 (2004): 89–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/b:cope.0000017964.44327.5c.

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12

Bellows, John, and Edward Miguel. "War and local collective action in Sierra Leone." Journal of Public Economics 93, no. 11-12 (2009): 1144–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpubeco.2009.07.012.

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13

Shteynberg, Garriy, Jacob B. Hirsh, Jon Garthoff, and R. Alexander Bentley. "Agency and Identity in the Collective Self." Personality and Social Psychology Review 26, no. 1 (2021): 35–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10888683211065921.

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Contemporary research on human sociality is heavily influenced by the social identity approach, positioning social categorization as the primary mechanism governing social life. Building on the distinction between agency and identity in the individual self (“I” vs. “Me”), we emphasize the analogous importance of distinguishing collective agency from collective identity (“We” vs. “Us”). While collective identity is anchored in the unique characteristics of group members, collective agency involves the adoption of a shared subjectivity that is directed toward some object of our attention, desire
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Gillette, Clayton P. "Plebiscites, Participation, and Collective Action in Local Government Law." Michigan Law Review 86, no. 5 (1988): 930. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1289235.

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15

Alberici, Augusta Isabella, and Patrizia Milesi. "Online discussion and the moral pathway to identity politicization and collective action." Europe’s Journal of Psychology 14, no. 1 (2018): 143–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.5964/ejop.v14i1.1507.

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Research on the mobilizing potential of the Internet has produced some controversy between optimistic vs. skeptical perspectives. Although some attention has been paid to the effects of online discussions on collective participation, very little is known about how people’s experience of online interactions affects the key psychosocial predictors of collective action. The present research investigated whether use of the Internet as a channel for deliberation influenced the moral pathway to collective mobilization by shaping users’ politicized identity, thereby indirectly influencing collective
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O’Brien, Kevin J., Lianjiang Li, and Mingxing Liu. "BUREAUCRAT-ASSISTED CONTENTION IN CHINA*." Mobilization: An International Quarterly 25, SI (2020): 661–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.17813/1086-671x-25-5-661.

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Bureaucrat-assisted contention in China is a type of collective action in which native-born local officials help socioeconomic elites launch or sustain popular action against outsider party secretaries by leaking information and sabotaging repression. Bureaucrats who assist local influentials are neither elite allies nor institutional activists. Instead, they unleash or support collective action as a weapon in a power struggle against ambitious, heavy-handed or corrupt superiors. Unlike mass demonstrations that are mobilized as a bargaining chip, bureaucrat-assisted contention hinges on a part
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Ricart, Joan Enric, Yuliya Snihur, Carlos Carrasco-Farré, and Pascual Berrone. "Grassroots Resistance to Digital Platforms and Relational Business Model Design to Overcome It: A Conceptual Framework." Strategy Science 5, no. 3 (2020): 271–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/stsc.2020.0104.

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Although extant research has studied incumbent resistance to digital platforms, it provides little understanding about when grassroots collective action by other ecosystem stakeholders against the digital platform is likely. In this paper, we identify the scope conditions detailing when local stakeholders can initiate grassroots collective action against the digital platform, a unique context characterized by fast growth, distributed innovation, role flexibility, and direct local connectivity, and propose viable solutions. Our conceptual framework suggests that grassroots collective action aga
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Jagers, Sverker C., Niklas Harring, Åsa Löfgren, et al. "On the preconditions for large-scale collective action." Ambio 49, no. 7 (2019): 1282–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-019-01284-w.

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Abstract The phenomenon of collective action and the origin of collective action problems have been extensively and systematically studied in the social sciences. Yet, while we have substantial knowledge about the factors promoting collective action at the local level, we know far less about how these insights travel to large-scale collective action problems. Such problems, however, are at the heart of humanity’s most pressing challenges, including climate change, large-scale natural resource depletion, biodiversity loss, nuclear proliferation, antibiotic resistance due to overconsumption of a
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Komakech, Hans Charles, Pieter van der Zaag, and Barbara van Koppen. "The dynamics between water asymmetry, inequality and heterogeneity sustaining canal institutions in the Makanya catchment, Tanzania." Water Policy 14, no. 5 (2012): 800–820. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wp.2012.196.

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It has been suggested that the collective action needed for integrated water management at larger spatial scales could be more effective and sustainable if it were built, bottom-up, on the nested arrangements by which local communities have managed their water resources at homestead, plot, village and sub-catchment levels. The up-scaling of such arrangements requires an understanding of why they emerge, how they function and how they are sustained. This paper presents a case study of local level water institutions in Bangalala village in the Makanya catchment, Tanzania. Unlike most research on
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20

Brooks, Sandra E., Eloise Chapman Davis, and John H. Farley. "Disparities in pap smear screening follow up: A catalyst for collective action vs. collective despair." Gynecologic Oncology 160, no. 2 (2021): 361–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2021.01.004.

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21

XU, YIQING, and YANG YAO. "Informal Institutions, Collective Action, and Public Investment in Rural China." American Political Science Review 109, no. 2 (2015): 371–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055415000155.

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Do informal institutions, rules, and norms created and enforced by social groups promote good local governance in environments of weak democratic or bureaucratic institutions? This question is difficult to answer because of challenges in defining and measuring informal institutions and identifying their causal effects. In the article, we investigate the effect of lineage groups, one of the most important vehicles of informal institutions in rural China, on local public goods expenditure. Using a panel dataset of 220 Chinese villages from 1986 to 2005, we find that village leaders from the two
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22

Tuan, Le Anh, Alison Cottrell, and David King. "Changes in Social Capital." Journal of Vietnamese Studies 9, no. 2 (2014): 68–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/vs.2014.9.2.68.

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This paper describes how the social capital of rice farmers of the Mekong Delta of Vietnam, as manifested in the tradition of collective farming practice, has changed. Collective rice farming persisted for decades, irrespective of critical events that challenged its continuation, due to two key factors: the high need for collective farming to ensure subsistence, and the availability of a closely knit social network that facilitated the exchange of labor. Despite its longevity, the practice of collective farming, particularly in terms of labor exchange and mutual aid in farming activities, has
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Wang, Liang, and Justin Tan. "Social Structure of Regional Entrepreneurship: The Impacts of Collective Action of Incumbents on De Novo Entrants." Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 43, no. 5 (2018): 855–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1042258717750861.

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The literature has posited that agglomeration economies and the formation of social relationships resulting from the geographic concentration of incumbents constitute the forces that “pull” new entrants into industry clusters. However, this proposition overlooks how the collective action of incumbents in pursuit of their own benefits affects new entrants. This study examines how business associations as collective action organizations established by incumbents to promote and safeguard group-wide interests contribute to de novo entrants. The empirical evidence from Canada’s telecommunication eq
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Divay, Gérard, and Youssef Slimani. "Hybridity and integration in local collective action: an analytical framework." International Review of Administrative Sciences 84, no. 3 (2018): 435–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020852317747371.

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Can an integrated territorial approach successfully do away with the silo structure that marks public action through the hybridisation of sectoral logics? Drawing from various strands of research, as well as an assessment of multiple studies on the impact of integrated territorial approaches on local social development, this article develops an analytical framework to address this question. We argue that integration takes place according to four regimes, whose dynamics range from the simple juxtaposition of sectoral organisations to a hybridisation of their organisational logics. The regimes w
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Picard, Séverine. "Collective action vs free movement The Laval and the Viking cases." Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research 14, no. 1 (2008): 160–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/102425890801400119.

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26

Annamraju, Shailaja. "Regional visions: the basis for collective strength and local action." Waterlines 18, no. 4 (2000): 12–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0262-8104.2000.018.

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27

Hartanto, Herlina, Maria Cristina B. Lorenzo, and Anita L. Frio. "Collective action and learning in developing a local monitoring system." International Forestry Review 4, no. 3 (2002): 184–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1505/ifor.4.3.184.17404.

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28

Yang, Yujeong, and Wei Chen. "Different Demands, Varying Responses: Local Government Responses to Workers’ Collective Actions in South China." China Quarterly 243 (October 31, 2019): 839–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741019001371.

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AbstractWhile Chinese local governments remain extremely wary of workers’ collective actions, they do not always suppress them; sometimes, they tolerate such actions and even seek to placate workers. What accounts for these different government responses to workers’ collective actions? Based on a sample of over 1,491 collective action cases that took place in Guangdong between 2011 and 2016, we find that the types of demands raised by workers during collective actions affect how local governments respond. Local governments are likely to forcefully intervene in collective actions in which worke
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Skarzhinskaya, Elena. "Stackelberg leader in a collective action model." Economics and the Mathematical Methods 57, no. 4 (2021): 117. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s042473880017519-9.

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Within a mathematical modelling framework, we analyze the conditions allowing a self-governedcollective to achieve Stackelberg equilibrium. It is assumed that members of the collective generate common income through individual effort, which income is then distributed among all members of the collective according to their predetermined share. Effort invested by each agent wields (imposes) a positive influence on the marginal income resulting from the effort invested by any other agent. Each member of the collective aims to maximize their individual gain. Within a model built on the most general
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Shuman, Eric, Dan Johnson, Tamar Saguy, and Eran Halperin. "Threat to the Group’s Image Can Motivate High Identifiers to Take Action Against In-group Transgressions." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 44, no. 11 (2018): 1523–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167218768800.

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When transgressions are committed by a group, those highly identified with the group are often least likely to recognize the transgressions, feel collective guilt, and engage in action to address them. We hypothesized that especially among high identifiers, demonstrating that in-group transgressions threaten the group’s image can induce normative conflict and thus collective guilt and action. In the first study, we demonstrate that high (vs. low) image threat increases normative conflict among high identifiers. In Study 2, we show that inducing normative conflict through image threat leads to
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Kuang, Xianwen, and Christian Göbel. "Sustaining Collective Action in Urbanizing China." China Quarterly 216 (October 18, 2013): 850–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741013001069.

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AbstractIn recent years there has been a proliferation of scholarship on protests and other forms of collective action in China. Important insights have been gained into how conflicts between social groups and local governments begin, which strategies and instruments protesters apply, and under which circumstances protests are likely to succeed or fail. However, comparatively little is known about the mobilizing structures and how such collective action can be sustained over a long period of time, in some instances over several years. Such perseverance would be remarkable even in a democracy,
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Wedy Nasrul, Zulmardi, and Tri Irfa Indrayani. "Synergy and optimization of Local institutional to Repair Gambir (Uncaria gambir Roxb) Market in Indonesia." International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Invention 7, no. 01 (2020): 5790–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.18535/ijsshi/v7i01.02.

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The relation between institutions and synergy between social capital produce social capital performance. Relationship and synergy between social capital between institutions will produce the best collective action. Collective action formed able to solve a problem in and between the institutions. Research aim of looking at the a lot of synergy of local institutions, the performance of social capital are quoted on the gambir. So on as well will be canvassed to see the act of collectively that is formed to address the issues the market gambir.This research methodology used a quantitative approach
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Greijdanus, Hedy, Sara Panerati, Tom Postmes, and Russell Spears. "From Moderate Action to Radical Protest Intentions." Contention 11, no. 1 (2023): 55–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2023.110104.

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Abstract We examine how anti-Trump democrats (N = 460), prior to the 2020 election, managed their options to protest, focusing on when moderate collective action predicts more radical intentions to protest. We investigate the relationship of moderate action involvement and effectiveness with radical action intentions and the effects of various other variables such as intergroup emotions, group identification, and political vs. participative efficacy. Although moderate action involvement is correlated with radical intentions, the effectiveness of moderate action is negatively related to radical
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Shi, Fayong, and Yongshun Cai. "Disaggregating the State: Networks and Collective Resistance in Shanghai." China Quarterly 186 (June 2006): 314–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741006000178.

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Collective action directed at the government is not rare in China, but why some actions endure and succeed whereas many others fail remains inadequately addressed. Based on a case of home owners' sustained collective resistance in Shanghai, this study finds that state power is fragmented at the local level. While the disparate priorities among different levels of state authorities provide opportunities for resistance, social networks between participants of collective action and officials or media workers may significantly help the former to achieve success.
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Suharti, S., D. Darusman, B. Nugroho, and L. Sundawati. "Conditions for Successful Local Collective Action in Mangrove Forest Management: Some Evidences from Eastern Coastal Area of South Sulawesi, Indonesia." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1027, no. 1 (2022): 012024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1027/1/012024.

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Abstract Resource management characterized by Common Pool Resources (CPRs) requires collective action for its sustainable management. CPRs with “rivalry” and “non-excludable” features face overexploitation problems because unlike the nature of pure public goods, the use of CPRs by one user will reduce the chances of other users taking advantage of it. This study aims to analyze the most appropriate local institutions and tenure arrangements for sustainable mangrove management in Eastern coast area of South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Data and information were collected through in-depth interviews inv
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Larrandaburu, Iban. "THE COLLECTIVE TERRITORIAL INTEREST, A NEW PARADIGM FOR TERRITORIAL PUBLIC ACTION?" Roczniki Administracji i Prawa Specjalny, no. XXIII (2023): 87–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0054.3280.

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The segmentation of the public interest through the specialisation of the powers of local authorities has made public action more complex. The concept of collective territorial interest could be an interesting way of collectively reorganising the ways in which public institutions act. The territorial collective interest is based on the idea of a new conception of the territory, seen as dynamic and evolving. It is based on cooperation between all the public and private players in the area. It is organised around open, collaborative governance and is formally embodied in a regional project co-co
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Dolšak, Nives. "Bowling Together: Mobilization of Collective Action by Environmental NGOs." Nonprofit Policy Forum 8, no. 1 (2017): 25–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/npf-2016-0025.

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AbstractSocial capital generated by frequent, face-to-face interactions provides the foundation for collective action. Does this also hold for a community action in post-communist, Central European countries where modern NGOs are perceived to be ineffective? This article examines this question in the context of the cleanup of illegal dumpsites organized by a Slovenian NGO, Ecologists without Borders, in 2010. This community cleanup effort sought to produce local public goods such as improved aesthetics, sanitation, and ground water quality. Local participation levels (percentage of adults cont
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Bacchini, Elena A. M., Daan Scheepers, Naomi Ellemers, and Marnix Naber. "Traditionally Advantaged Group Members’ Affective and Physiological Responses to Social Change." Social Psychology 55, no. 6 (2024): 295–305. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-9335/a000567.

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Abstract: Across four studies, we examined how traditionally advantaged group members respond to societal changes emotionally and in terms of collective action tendencies supporting the disadvantaged group. In two studies, we also used a novel technology to extract heart rate from webcam images as an index of participants’ engagement while reflecting on social change or stability. When social change (vs. stability) was made salient, participants reported less distress and less negative self-focused emotions, which mediated lower collective action tendencies. There were also signs of lower phys
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Steinhilper, Elias, and Matthias Hoffmann. "RELATIONAL SEDIMENTS IN THE BACKWASH OF PROTEST WAVES: EXPLORING NETWORK CONSEQUENCES OF COLLECTIVE ACTION." Mobilization: An International Quarterly 29, no. 2 (2024): 167–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.17813/1086-671x-29-2-167.

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This article addresses the puzzling relational void in the analysis of collective action consequences by exploring how protest waves affect local network structures in two German towns. We compare three periods of time: a preprotest wave latency period, a protest wave period, and a postwave latency period, as defined in relation to contentious collective action around the refugee reception crisis in 2015. Adopting a field perspective, our analysis uses digital communication data to capture the referencing practices between all actors involved in local migration-related protests irrespective of
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Gebremedhin, Berhanu, John Pender, and Girmay Tesfay. "Community natural resource management: the case of woodlots in Northern Ethiopia." Environment and Development Economics 8, no. 1 (2003): 129–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1355770x0300007x.

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This paper examines the nature of community management of woodlots and investigates the determinants of collective action and its effectiveness in managing woodlots, based on a survey of 100 villages in Tigray, northern Ethiopia. Despite limited current benefits received by community members, the woodlots contribute substantially to community wealth, increasing members' willingness to provide collective effort to manage the woodlots. We find that benefits are greater and problems less on woodlots managed at the village level than those managed at a higher municipality level, and that the avera
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Kwak, Chang-Gyu, Namhoon Ki, and Suk-Joon Hwang. "Selective vs. Collective Outcomes of Collaborative Governance: The Impacts of Federal Stimulus Programs on Local and Regional Governance Outcomes." Sustainability 13, no. 21 (2021): 11941. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su132111941.

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A number of studies have demonstrated that local government’s self-governing mechanisms can bring about positive collective outcomes for an entire region. However, less attention has been paid to different levels of collective outcomes (e.g., individual local governments vs. entire regions). Comparing such selective and collective outcomes in interlocal collaborations, this study attempts to explore which specific collaborative self-governing mechanisms can better work for which respective outcomes. Applying network approaches with time-series cross-sectional data, this study investigates how
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Nguyen, Quang N., Dung M. Nguyen, and Luot V. Nguyen. "An Examination of the Social Identity Model of Collective Action in the Context of Vietnam." Open Psychology Journal 14, no. 1 (2021): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1874350102114010001.

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Introduction: Although collective action relating to land and environmental disputes in Vietnam has been increasing over the past decades, there is little research from the perspective of social psychology on this topic. Objective: This study was conducted to examine the applicability of the social identity model of collective action [SIMCA] in the context of Vietnam. Specifically, we assessed the predictive powers of moral conviction, politicized identity, group-based anger, and group efficacy on people’s intentions to engage in collective action in a situation where people from three commune
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WAFA, Ahmed Belbachir. "Territorial Management: A Tool for Local Development." Eurasia Proceedings of Educational and Social Sciences 32 (January 3, 2024): 80–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.55549/epess.1412822.

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Territorial management involves reinventing the territory in terms of projects and promoting its development. It entails guiding transformation processes and altering the territory while considering its specificities and resources, in order to create a development process that engages all local stakeholders. The objective of territorial management is to encourage the development of the territory with the participation of the entire population. It involves building a system of alliances where the population is seen as a stakeholder. This fosters improved institutional cooperation among local au
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McCaskill, John, Julie Haworth, and James Harrington. "A Case Study of Public Trust, Collective Action, and Water." Journal of Public Administration and Governance 9, no. 1 (2019): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/jpag.v9i1.14129.

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Public trust is a critical component in the governance of public resources. The structure of that governance can have a profound impact on the level of trust citizens have in the way resources are allocated. This study relates the findings of an exit poll conducted during the primaries for the 2016 presidential elections. The questions related to the level of trust voters had regarding their local government and their subsequent attitudes toward the water conservation messaging from those governments. The findings support national survey findings that citizens in the United States have a high
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Jacobs, Eelco, and Irna Hofman. "Aid, social capital and local collective action: attitudes towards community-based health funds and village organizations in Rushan, Tajikistan." Community Development Journal 55, no. 3 (2019): 399–418. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdj/bsz005.

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Abstract Despite overwhelming interest in the role of social capital in international development, attention to the interplay of community-based development aid with local collective-action dynamics in Central Asia and particularly Tajikistan has remained limited. This paper investigates donor-induced local institutions for collective action in rural Tajikistan with a focus on the introduction of a community-based health insurance. Social capital and collective-action theories are used to interpret results from qualitative research in two Rushan District villages in the Gorno-Badakhshan region
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Wu, Tao, Lin Gui, Liguo Zhang, and Chih-Chun Kung. "Information Jamming and Capture Cost: A Global Game Analysis of Collective Action." SAGE Open 13, no. 1 (2023): 215824402211423. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21582440221142302.

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To understand the interactive mechanisms behind citizens’ collective action against the project implementation of local governments of authoritarian regimes, we develop a global game model in which the decisions of local governments, media outlets, and citizens are endogenous. The methodology of theoretical game model focuses on the relationship between media capture and citizens’ belief formation and how it affects the citizens’ decision to participate in a demonstration. Our results show that if the information jamming effect dominates the capture cost effect, then increasing the supervision
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Skogan, Wesley G. "Communities, Crime, and Neighborhood Organization." Crime & Delinquency 35, no. 3 (1989): 437–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011128789035003008.

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It is widely believed that voluntary action by neighborhood residents can play an important role in maintaining order. However, the ability of individuals to act in defense of their community is constrained by the opportunities for action that are available to them. Participation in collective efforts against crime is confined to places where the existence of local organizations makes that possible. The distribution of group activity across the metropolitan landscape thus defines the “opportunity structure” for local collective action. This article examines the impact of serious crime, the eco
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FAUZA MAYANA SH, RANTI, and TISNI SANTIKA SH MH. "Geographical Indications Protection: Collective Action for Local Empowerment and Wealth Creation." International Review of Management and Business Research 7, no. 1 (2018): 102–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.30543/7-1(2018)-10.

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Dell, Melissa, Nathan Lane, and Pablo Querubin. "The Historical State, Local Collective Action, and Economic Development in Vietnam." Econometrica 86, no. 6 (2018): 2083–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.3982/ecta15122.

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Wilson, Darrin H. E., Brad A. M. Johnson, Eric Stokan, and Michael Overton. "Institutional Collective Action During COVID‐19: Lessons in Local Economic Development." Public Administration Review 80, no. 5 (2020): 862–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/puar.13234.

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