Authors
Mattias Wahlström, Moritz Sommer, Piotr Kocyba, Michiel De Vydt, Joost De Moor, Stephen Davies, Ruud Wouters, Magnus Wennerhag, Jacquelien van Stekelenburg, Katrin Uba, Claire Saunders, Dieter Rucht, D Mickecz, Lorenzo Zamponi, Jasmin Lorenzini, Marta Kołczyńska, Sebastian Haunss, Marco Giugni, Teodora Gaidyte, Brian Doherty, Aron Buzogany
Publication date
2019/7/9
Journal
Kennislink
Pages
1-121
Description
The# FridaysForFuture climate protests mobilized more than 1.6 million people around the globe in March 2019. Through a school strike, a new generation has been galvanized, representing a historical turn in climate activism. This wave of climate protest mobilization is unique in its tactics, global scope and appeal to teenage school students. Media coverage of these protests and high-level national and international political meetings involving the movement’s icon, Greta Thunberg, illustrate a level of global attention that no previous youth movement has ever received. A team of social scientists from universities across Europe1 organized a survey of the global FFF strike events on March 15. The team surveyed protesters in 13 cities in nine European countries using the same research design to collect data, following the well-established protest survey methodology used previously in the “Caught in the Act of Protest: Contextualizing Contestation”(CCC) project.
Total citations
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Scholar articles