“…This line of analysis suggests that the relationship between law, movements, and forms of rule deserves much more attention than it has yet received. Rich and growing literatures on authoritarian legality (Chen & Fu, 2022b;Cheesman, 2015;Gallagher, 2017;Hilbink, 2007;Moustafa, 2007;Rajah, 2012) and autocratic legalism (Corrales, 2015; de Sa e Silva, 2022a; 2022b; Pirro & Stanley, 2022;Scheppele, 2018) have documented the many ways that authoritarians mobilize law to entrench and legitimize their power, and some of this literature has examined movements (e.g., Atiles-Osoria, 2012;Chen, 2016;Chua, 2014;Gallagher, 2017;Junge et al, 2021;Massoud, 2013;Ng & Wong, 2017;Tam, 2013). But the focus has overwhelmingly been on how authoritarian states use law to prevent and contain movements that threaten their rule, with relatively little recent scholarship on the ways that mobilization can support authoritarian states (for exceptions see Atiles-Osoria, 2012;.…”