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Beyond Protests: Using Computational Text Analysis to Explore a Greater Variety of Social Movement Activities

aNorthwestern University, USA
bUniversity of British Columbia, Canada

Methodological Advances in Research on Social Movements, Conflict, and Change

ISBN: 978-1-80117-887-7, eISBN: 978-1-80117-886-0

Publication date: 12 July 2023

Abstract

Social movement scholars use protest events as a way to quantify social movements and have most often used large, national newspapers to identify those events. This has introduced known and unknown biases into our measurement of social movements. We know that national newspapers tend to cover larger and more contentious events and organizations. Protest events are furthermore a small part of what social movements actually do. Without other readily available options to quantify social movements, however, big-N studies have continued to focus on protest events via a few large newspapers. With advances in digitized data and computational methods, we now no longer have to rely on large newspapers or focus only on protests to quantify important aspects of social movements. In this paper, we use the environmental movement as a case study, analyzing data from a wide range of local, regional, and national newspapers in the United States to quantify multiple facets of social movements. We argue that the incorporation of more data and new methods to quantify information in text has the potential to transform the way we both conceive of and measure social movements in three ways: (1) the type of focal social movement organization included, (2) the type of tactics and issues covered, and (3) the ability to go beyond protest events as the primary unit of analysis. In addition to demonstrating ways that the focus on counting protest events has introduced specific biases in the type of tactics, issues, and organizations covered in social movement research, we argue that computational methods can help us extract and count meaningful aspects of social movements well beyond event counts. In short, the infusion of new data and methods into social movements, peace, and conflict studies could lead us to a substantial shift in the way we quantify social movements, from protest events to everything that occurs outside of them.

Keywords

Citation

King, B.G. and Nelson, L.K. (2023), "Beyond Protests: Using Computational Text Analysis to Explore a Greater Variety of Social Movement Activities", Maher, T.V. and Schoon, E.W. (Ed.) Methodological Advances in Research on Social Movements, Conflict, and Change (Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change, Vol. 47), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 13-35. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0163-786X20230000047002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Brayden G King and Laura K. Nelson. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited