Public Goods, Expressive Values, and Protest Participation: Evidence From a Conjoint Experiment in Hong Kong
Theodore Charm,
Tse-min Lin
Abstract:In recent decades, there has been a revival of contentious social movements worldwide. Given the collective action problem, what factors motivate ordinary citizens to join protests? If the issue of a protest matters, what factors motivate people to weigh different issues differently? This paper devises a unified theory of collective action and argues that individuals are more likely to join a protest when they perceive higher values of the public good, higher expressive benefits, higher expected turnouts, and … Show more
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