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  2. Moral shock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_shock

    The Art of Moral Protest shows that would-be protestors do not always know other protestors and often formulate their beliefs on the fly, so to speak. Hence, Jasper’s concept is able to account for an additional path into protest, a path emphasizing the relative importance of events and their initial consciousness-raising effects on individuals.

  3. Collective action - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_action

    Discussion in this area continues to expand, and has influenced discussions in other disciplines including anthropology, developmental psychology, and economics. One general question is whether it is necessary to think in terms that go beyond the personal intentions of individual human beings properly to characterize what it is to act together.

  4. Insufficient justification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insufficient_justification

    Insufficient justification is an effect studied in the discipline of social psychology.It states that people are more likely to engage in a behavior that contradicts the beliefs they hold personally when offered a smaller reward compared to a larger reward. [1]

  5. Protest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protest

    A protest (also called a demonstration, remonstration, or remonstrance) is a public act of objection, disapproval or dissent against political advantage. [1] [2] Protests can be thought of as acts of cooperation in which numerous people cooperate by attending, and share the potential costs and risks of doing so. [3]

  6. Mass mobilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_mobilization

    Mass mobilization (also known as social mobilization or popular mobilization) refers to mobilization of civilian population as part of contentious politics.Mass mobilization is defined as a process that engages and motivates a wide range of partners and allies at national and local levels to raise awareness of and demand for a particular development objective through face-to-face dialogue.

  7. Boycott - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boycott

    Most organized consumer boycotts today are focused on long-term change of buying habits, and so fit into part of a larger political program, with many techniques that require a longer structural commitment, e.g. reform to commodity markets, or government commitment to moral purchasing, e.g. the longstanding boycott of South African businesses ...

  8. Passive-aggressive behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive-aggressive_behavior

    In psychology, "passive-aggression" is one of the most misused psychological terms.After some debate, the American Psychiatric Association dropped it from the list of personality disorders in the DSM IV as too narrow to be a full-blown diagnosis and not well enough supported by scientific evidence to meet increasingly rigorous standards of definition.

  9. Silent protest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_protest

    A silent protest is an organized effort where the participants stay quiet to demonstrate disapproval. It is used as a form of civil disobedience and nonviolent resistance [1] that encourages voicing out different opinions through certain acts such as not showing support to a certain product, attending mass parade, having symbolism, and educating and encouraging other people to join the protest.