1.
Bryman, A. & Cramer, D. Quantitative data analysis with IBM SPSS 17, 18 and 19: a guide for social scientists. (Routledge, 2011).
2.
Field, A. P. Discovering statistics using SPSS: (and sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll). (SAGE Publications, 2009).
3.
Colin D. Gray & Kinnear, Paul R . IBM SPSS statistics 19 made simple. (Psychology Press, 2012).
4.
Protest Survey - home. http://www.protestsurvey.eu/.
5.
Democracy in Europe and the Mobilization of society. http://demos.iue.it/.
6.
Resources to help you learn and use SPSS. http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/spss/.
7.
Protest Survey - home. http://www.protestsurvey.eu/.
8.
Jacquelien  van Stekelenburg. Contextualizing Contestation: Framework, Design, and Data. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 17, 249–262 (2012).
9.
Stefaan  Walgrave. Selection and Response Bias in Protest Surveys. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 16, 203–222 (2011).
10.
Stefaan  Walgrave. RESPONSE PROBLEMS IN THE PROTEST SURVEY DESIGN: EVIDENCE FROM FIFTY-ONE PROTEST EVENTS IN SEVEN COUNTRIES. 21, 83–104 (2016).
11.
Diani, M. The concept of social movement. The Sociological Review 40, 1–25 (1992).
12.
Saunders, Clare. Chapter 2. in Environmental Networks and Social Movement Theory (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013).
13.
Snow, David & Soule, Sarah. Chapter 1. in A primer on social movements 1–22 (W. W. Norton, 2010).
14.
Crossley, Nick. Chapter 1. in Making sense of social movements (Buckingham : Open University Press, 2002.).
15.
Della Porta, Donatella. 1.2 What is Distinctive about Social Movements. in Social movements :  an introduction 20–29 (Malden, MA. : Blackwell, 2006.).
16.
Mario Diani and Ivano Bison. Organizations, Coalitions, and Movements. Theory and Society 33, 281–309 (2004).
17.
Opp, Karl-Dieter. Chapter 2. in Theories of political protest and social movements: a multidisciplinary introduction, critique, and synthesis (Routledge, 2009).
18.
Saunders, C. Insiders, thresholders, and outsiders in west European global justice networks: network positions and modes of coordination. European Political Science Review 1–23 (2013) doi:10.1017/S1755773913000015.
19.
Snow, David. Mapping the terrain. in The Blackwell companion to social movements vol. Blackwell companions to sociology 3–16 (Blackwell, 2007).
20.
Tarrow, Sidney G. Introduction. in Power in movement : social movements and contentious politics 1–15 (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
21.
Dependent and independent variables review (article) | Khan Academy. https://www.khanacademy.org/math/pre-algebra/pre-algebra-equations-expressions/pre-algebra-dependent-independent/a/dependent-and-independent-variables-review.
22.
Bryman, A. & Cramer, D. Quantitative data analysis with IBM SPSS 17, 18 and 19: a guide for social scientists. (Routledge, 2011).
23.
Colin D. Gray & Kinnear, Paul R. IBM SPSS statistics 19 made simple. (Psychology Press, 2012).
24.
Field, A. P. Discovering statistics using SPSS: (and sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll). (SAGE Publications, 2009).
25.
Nikos Ntoumanis. A general introduction to the SPSS environment. (2013).
26.
Crossley, N. Chapter 8. in Making sense of social movements (Open University Press, 2002).
27.
Eggert, N. Homogenizing "old” and "new” social movements: Comparing participants in May Day and climate change demonstrations. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 17, 335–348 (2012).
28.
Melucci, Alberto. A strange kind of newness: What’s new in new social movements? in New Social Movements 101–130 (Temple University Press, 1994).
29.
Walgrave, S. & Verhulst, J. Towards ‘New Emotional Movements’? A Comparative Exploration into a Specific Movement Type. Social Movement Studies 5, 275–304 (2006).
30.
Scott, Alan. Ideology and the new social movements. vol. Controversies in sociology (Unwin Hyman, 1990).
31.
Olcese, C. & Saunders, C. Students in the Winter Protests: Still a New Social Movement? in Higher education in the UK and the US: converging models in a global academic world? vol. v. 1 (Brill, 2014).
32.
Rucht, Dieter. The strategies and action repertoires of new movements. in Challenging the political order: new social and political movements in western democracies vol. Europe and the international order 156–175 (Polity, 1990).
33.
Saunders, Clare. Chapter 6. in Environmental Networks and Social Movement Theory (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013).
34.
Saunders, Clare, Grasso, Maria, Olcese, Cristiana, Rainsford, Emily & Rootes, Christopher. Explaining Differential Protest Participation: Novices, Returners, Repeaters, and Stalwarts. Mobilization 17, 263–280.
35.
Snow, David & Soule, Sarah. Chapter 4. in A primer on social movements (W. W. Norton, 2010).
36.
Beyerlein, Kraig & Hipp, John R. A Two-Stage Model for a Two-Stage Process: How Biographical Availability Matters for Social Movement Mobilization. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 11, (2006).
37.
Doug McAdam. Recruitment to High-Risk Activism: The Case of Freedom Summer. American Journal of Sociology 92, 64–90 (1986).
38.
Doug McAdam and Ronnelle Paulsen. Specifying the Relationship Between Social Ties and Activism. American Journal of Sociology 99, 640–667 (1993).
39.
Passy, Florence. Social networks matter. But how? in Social movements and networks: relational approaches to collective action vol. Comparative politics 21–48 (Oxford University Press, 2003).
40.
Jasper, James & Poletta, Frances. Emotional dimensions of social movements. in The Blackwell companion to social movements vol. Blackwell companions to sociology (Blackwell, 2007).
41.
Gould, D. Passionate political processes: Bringing emotions back into the study of social movements. in Rethinking social movements: structure, meaning, and emotion (eds. Goodwin, J. & Jasper, J. M.) (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2004).
42.
James M. Jasper and Jane D. Poulsen. Recruiting Strangers and Friends: Moral Shocks and Social Networks in Animal Rights and Anti-Nuclear Protests. Social Problems 42, 493–512 (1995).
43.
Jean-Pierre Reed. Emotions in Context: Revolutionary Accelerators, Hope, Moral Outrage, and Other Emotions in the Making of Nicaragua’s Revolution. Theory and Society 33, 653–703 (2004).
44.
Goodwin, Jeff., Jasper, James M. & Polletta, Francesca. Passionate politics : emotions and social movements. (Chicago ; London : University of Chicago Press, 2001.).
45.
Bradburn, N. M., Sudman, S. & Wansink, B. Asking questions: the definitive guide to questionnaire design - for market research, political polls, and social and health questionnaires. (Jossey-Bass, 2004).
46.
Fowler, F. J. Chapter 4 Some General Rules for Designing Good Survey Instruments. in Improving survey questions: Design and Evaluation 78–103 (Sage Publications, 1995).
47.
Ho, R. Chapter 2 Introduction to SPSS. in Understanding statistics for the social sciences with IBM SPSS 9–26 (CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2017).
48.
Aldridge, A. & Levine, K. Surveying the social world: principles and practice in survey research. (Open University Press, 2001).
49.
Foddy, W. H. Constructing questions for interviews and questionnaires: theory and practice in social research. (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
50.
Gillham, B. Developing a questionnaire. (Continuum, 2007).
51.
Roth, S. & Saunders, C. Gender Differences in Political Participation: Comparing Street Demonstrators in Sweden and the United Kingdom. (2018).
52.
Sherry Cable. Women’s Social Movement Involvement: The Role of Structural Availability in Recruitment and Participation Processes. The Sociological Quarterly 33, (1992).
53.
Rachel L. Einwohner, Jocelyn A. Hollander and Toska Olson. Engendering Social Movements: Cultural Images and Movement Dynamics. Gender and Society 14, (2000).
54.
Kuumba, M. B. Gender and social movements. (AltaMira Press, 2001).
55.
Marx Ferree, M. & McClurg Mueller, C. Feminism and the Women’s Movement: A Global Perspective. in The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements (eds. Snow, D. A., Soule, S. A. & Kriesi, H.) 576–607 (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2004). doi:10.1002/9780470999103.ch25.
56.
Poloni-Staudinger, L. M. & Ortbals, C. D. Gendered Political Opportunities? Elite Alliances, Electoral Cleavages, and Activity Choice Among Women’s Groups in the UK, France, and Germany. Social Movement Studies 10, 55–79 (2011).
57.
Snyder, A. C. & Stobbe, S. P. Critical aspects of gender in conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and social movements. vol. v. 32 (Emerald, 2011).
58.
Bryman, Alan & Cramer, Duncan. Quantitative data analysis with SPSS 17, 18 and 19: a guide for social scientists. (Routledge, 2011).
59.
Field, A. P. Discovering statistics using SPSS: (and sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll). (SAGE Publications, 2009).
60.
Colin D. Gray & Kinnear, Paul R. Chapter 6. in IBM SPSS statistics 19 made simple (Psychology Press, 2012).
61.
della Porta , Donatella. Social movements and multi-level governance: The external dimension of democracy. in Democracy in social movements 100–126 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
62.
Giugni, Marco, Nai, Alessandro & Reiter, Herbert. Protest and the forum: Forms of participation in the global justice movement. in Another Europe: Conceptions and practices of democracy in the European Social Forums (Routledge, 2013).
63.
Saunders, Clare & Andretta, Massimiliano. The organizational dimension: How organizational formality, voice and influence affect mobilization and participation. in Another Europe: Conceptions and practices of democracy in the European Social Forums (Routledge, 2013).
64.
RUSSELL DALTON, ALIX VAN SICKLE and STEVEN WELDON. The Individual-Institutional Nexus of Protest Behaviour. British Journal of Political Science 40, (2010).
65.
KNUTSEN, O. Value orientations, political conflicts and left-right identification: A comparative study. European Journal of Political Research 28, 63–93 (1995).
66.
Bernhagen, P. & Marsh, M. Voting and Protesting: Explaining Citizen Participation in Old and New European Democracies. Democratization 14, 44–72 (2007).
67.
Clarke, N., Jennings, W., Moss, J. & Stoker, G. Anti-politics and the Left. Renewal 24, 9–18 (2016).
68.
Crawford, J. T. & Xhambazi, E. Predicting Political Biases Against the Occupy Wall Street and Tea Party Movements. Political Psychology 36, 111–121 (2015).
69.
Opp, K.-D. Postmaterialism, Collective Action, and Political Protest. American Journal of Political Science 34, (1990).
70.
William K. Carroll and R. S. Ratner. Master Framing and Cross-Movement Networking in Contemporary Social Movements. The Sociological Quarterly 37, 601–625 (1996).
71.
Roberto M. Fernandez and Doug McAdam. Social Networks and Social Movements: Multiorganizational Fields and Recruitment to Mississippi Freedom Summer. Sociological Forum 3, 357–382 (1988).
72.
David S. Meyer and Nancy Whittier. Social Movement Spillover. Social Problems 41, 277–298 (1994).
73.
Russell L. Curtis, Jr. and Louis A. Zurcher, Jr. Stable Resources of Protest Movements: The Multi-Organizational Field. Social Forces 52, 53–61 (1973).
74.
Soule, Sarah. Diffusion processes within and across movements. in The Blackwell companion to social movements vol. Blackwell companions to sociology 294–310 (Blackwell, 2007).
75.
David Strang and Sarah A. Soule. Diffusion in Organizations and Social Movements: From Hybrid Corn to Poison Pills. Annual Review of Sociology 24, 265–290 (1998).
76.
Van Dyke, N. Crossing Movement Boundaries: Factors that Facilitate Coalition Protest by American College Students, 1930–1990. Social Problems 50, 226–250 (2003).
77.
Saunders, Clare. Anti-politics in action? Exploring European street demonstrators’ extent of disaffection with and disconnection from formal politics.
78.
Braun, D. & Hutter, S. Political trust, extra-representational participation and the openness of political systems. International Political Science Review 37, 151–165 (2016).
79.
Pippa Norris, Stefaan Walgrave and Peter Van Aelst. Who Demonstrates? Antistate Rebels, Conventional Participants, or Everyone? Comparative Politics 37, 189–205 (2005).
80.
Hay, C. & Stoker, G. REVITALISING POLITICS: HAVE WE LOST THE PLOT? Representation 45, 225–236 (2009).
81.
Norris, Pippa. Chapter 10 [IN] Democratic phoenix : reinventing political activism. in Democratic phoenix : reinventing political activism 188–212 (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2002.).
82.
Henrik Serup Christensen. All the same? Examining the link between three kinds of political dissatisfaction and protest. Comparative European Politics 14, 781–801.
83.
Barnes, Samuel H. (Samuel Henry),. Political action : mass participation in five Western democracies. (Beverly Hills, Calif. : Sage Publications, c1979.).
84.
Rose, David. Introducing data analysis for social scientists. (Open University Press, 1996).
85.
Bryman, A. & Cramer, D. Quantitative data analysis with SPSS Release 10 for Windows: a guide for social scientists. (Routledge, 2001).