“…Thus, such coalitions may face a wide range of challenges including cultural and political differences (Lichterman, ; Smith & Bandy, ), divergent identity‐based motivations for taking action (Staggenborg, , ), different grievances and/or framings of the problem (Beamish & Luebbers, ), diverging tactical preferences (Rusch, ), resource inequalities and power asymmetries (Einwohner et al, ; Levi & Murphy, ), lack of overlap in membership (Staggenborg, , ), geographic distance (Smith & Bandy, ; Okamato, ), informal boundary policing (Maney, ), and particularly for transnational coalitions, limited opportunities to interact (Maney, ), and language differentials (Bandy & Smith, ). Consequently, trust is often an issue (Wood, ), to the degree that, in the words of Bystydzienski and Schacht (, p. 5), “even seemingly progressive individuals … [would] still typically view those individuals having the ‘other' identity with trepidation.”…”