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In: New directions in comparative and international politics
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- List of Tables and Figures -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Political Protest and Rational Choice Theory -- 2.1. The Rational Choice Model -- 2.2. The Rational Choice Model Under Attack -- 2.3. Testing the Rational Choice Model by Survey Research -- 2.4. The Rational Choice Model and Competing Hypotheses About Political Protest -- Notes -- 3 Research Design -- 3.1. The Data -- 3.2. The Construction of Political Protest Scales -- Notes -- 4 Rational Choice Models of Political Protest -- 4.1. A Public Goods Theory of Political Protest -- 4.2. Selective Incentives -- 4.3. Recursive Models -- 4.4. Nonrecursive Models -- 4.5. Summary and Conclusions -- Notes -- 5 Social Integration and Political Protest -- 5.1. The General Model: Linking Rational Choice Variables, Integration, and Political Protest -- 5.2. Hypotheses -- 5.3. The Procedure for Testing the Hypotheses -- 5.4. Integration into Voluntary Associations: An Analysis of the Hamburg Data -- 5.5. Integration into Voluntary Associations: An Analysis of the New York City Data -- 5.6. Integration into Voluntary Associations: An Analysis of the German Study -- 5.7. Community Integration -- 5.8. Community Integration: An Analysis of the New York City Data -- 5.9. Community Integration: An Analysis of the Hamburg Data -- 5.10 Multivariate Models -- 5.11. Summary and Conclusions -- Notes -- 6 Relative Deprivation and Political Protest -- 6.1. The Concept and Theory of Relative Deprivation -- 6.2. Measurement of Relative Deprivation -- 6.3. Results -- 6.4. Summary and Conclusions -- Notes -- 7 Demographic Variables and Political Protest -- 7.1. Protest and Variables of the Life Cycle -- 7.2. Protest and Social Class -- 7.3. Protest and Gender -- 7.4. Protest and Religion -- 7.5. A Multivariate Demographic Model.
The authors systematically apply rational choice theory in order to suggest hypotheses about political protest. They test these hypotheses by means of surveys and compare their rational choice hypotheses with competing hypotheses.
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