{"dcterms:modified":"2025-04-01","dcterms:creator":"Harvard Dataverse","@type":"ore:ResourceMap","schema:additionalType":"Dataverse OREMap Format v1.0.1","dvcore:generatedBy":{"@type":"schema:SoftwareApplication","schema:name":"Dataverse","schema:version":"6.6 build 1829-192cdc4","schema:url":"https://github.com/iqss/dataverse"},"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/datasets/export?exporter=OAI_ORE&persistentId=https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/PT2IB9","ore:describes":{"citation:datasetContact":{"citation:datasetContactName":"Vink, Maarten Peter","citation:datasetContactAffiliation":"Maastricht University","citation:datasetContactEmail":"m.vink@maastrichtuniversity.nl"},"publication":{"publicationCitation":"Cebotari, V., & Vink, M. P. (2013). A configurational analysis of ethnic protest in Europe. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 54(4) 298–324.","publicationURL":"http://cos.sagepub.com/content/54/4/298"},"author":[{"citation:authorName":"Cebotari, Victor","citation:authorAffiliation":"Maastricht University"},{"citation:authorName":"Vink, Maarten Peter","citation:authorAffiliation":"Maastricht University / European University Institute","authorIdentifierScheme":"ORCID","authorIdentifier":"0000-0001-7143-4859"}],"citation:keyword":{"citation:keywordValue":"Causal complexity; ethnic protest; Europe; fuzzy-set analysis; QCA; minorities at risk"},"citation:dsDescription":{"citation:dsDescriptionValue":"This article analyzes the conditions under which ethnic minorities intensify or moderate their protest behavior. While this question has been previously asked, we find that prior studies tend to generalize explanations across a varied set of ethnic groups and assume that causal conditions can independently explain whether groups are more or less mobilized. By contrast, this study employs a technique – fuzzy-set analysis – that is geared toward matching comparable groups to specific analytical configurations of causal factors to explain the choice for strong and weak protest. The analysis draws on a sample of 29 ethnic minorities in Europe and uses three group and two contextual conditions inspired by Gurr’s ethnopolitical conflict model to understand why some ethnic minorities protest more frequently than others. We find that two group-related factors have the strongest claim to being generalizable: while territorial concentration is a necessary condition for strong protest, national pride is a necessary condition for weak protest. The contextual factors of level of democracy and ethnic fractionalization, which are often emphasized in the literature, and the perceived political discrimination of a group, are neither necessary nor individually sufficient conditions for either strong or weak protest. Hence, they help understanding some cases, but not all, and only in combination with other conditions. Such causal complexity, inherent in the phenomenon of ethnic protest, underscores the need for a case-sensitive, yet comparative, approach."},"subject":["Arts and Humanities","Law","Social Sciences"],"citation:depositor":"Vink, Maarten Peter","citation:notesText":"For the original analysis in the paper published in 2013 we used the software fs/QCA 2.0. However, we have also replicated these analyses with the \"QCA\" package for R (with minor differences due to slightly different calibration algorithms in fs/QCA and QCA. The R script and a txt file are included here, in addition to the csv file we originally used for the IJCS publication.","dateOfDeposit":"2015-09-25","title":"Replication Data for: A configurational analysis of ethnic protest in Europe","@id":"https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/PT2IB9","@type":["ore:Aggregation","schema:Dataset"],"schema:version":"2.0","schema:name":"Replication Data for: A configurational analysis of ethnic protest in Europe","schema:dateModified":"Sat Dec 05 10:33:49 UTC 2015","schema:datePublished":"2015-09-25","schema:creativeWorkStatus":"RELEASED","schema:license":"http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0","dvcore:fileTermsOfAccess":{"dvcore:fileRequestAccess":false},"schema:includedInDataCatalog":"Harvard Dataverse","schema:isPartOf":{"schema:name":"Maarten Vink Dataverse","@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/mpvink","schema:description":"Maarten Vink is Chair in Citizenship Studies and Director of the Global Citizenship research area within the Global Governance Programme at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute. He is also Co-Director of the Global Citizenship Observatory (GLOBALCIT).\n\nVink currently leads the research project “Migrant Life Course and Legal Status Transition (MiLifeStatus)” funded by a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council (2016-2021). He co-edited the Oxford Handbook of Citizenship (OUP, 2017) and has published on immigrant naturalisation, comparative citizenship regimes, dual citizenship, and Europeanization, among others.\n\nMaarten Vink is on leave from Maastricht University where he is Professor of Political Sociology and was one of the founders of the Maastricht Center for Citizenship, Migration and Development (MACIMIDE). He holds a PhD in Political Science from Leiden University (2003).","schema:isPartOf":{"schema:name":"Harvard Dataverse","@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/harvard","schema:description":"<span><span><span><h3>Share, archive, and get credit for your data. 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