“…The application of the approach has been used to measure and capture the visibility and resonance capacity of social movements and whether their claims are perceived legitimate in the eyes of the public and authorities. To this end, numerous prominent works of this tradition have paid attention to the media coverage of social movements, mainly deploying quantitative and comparative methods (for instance, see Ferree, 2003;Koopmans and Olzak, 2004;Giugni et al, 2005;Bail, 2012;Brown, 2013;Motta 2014;Vasi et al;Bail et al, 2017;Anderson, 2018), as other scholars focused on the role of framings (McCammon et al, 2007), emotions (Bröer and Duyvendak, 2009), and transnational diffusion of intellectual discourses (Ushiyama, 2019). At this juncture, the explicitly interactive character of the DOS approach provides the researcher to explore the dynamic interaction between the state, social movements and the public sphere.…”