Dataset:
It is a huge challenge to build and maintain a protest camp, especially in autocratic regimes. This includes a number of tasks as setting up barricades, providing portable toilets, organizing food and other supplies. These are essential activities to keep a protest camp running. Even if the set up and infrastructure of a camp is temporary, it reflects the urgency and determination of those who protest. Our aim is to systematically collect information about the basic and auxiliary logistics we find in protest camp around the world. Thus, the creation of the LOOPS dataset is the first core objective of the research group. Despite technical challenges and a shifting social media landscape, we developed a first dataset of protest camp logistics in autocracies. The foundation of a standardized yet representative dataset, built upon the coding of thousands of social media images by a diverse research team, lies in a thorough coder training, a strong emphasis on inter-coder reliability, continuous supervision of coders, and the use of a comprehensive coding handbook. We will release the dataset in a transdisciplinary workshop and invite practitioners, journalists, and scholars to introduce the dataset. The event will include several interactive sessions and will be led by a moderator and a data visualization journalist.
Custom Coding Platform:
Our coding platform 'LOOPS: Image Coding' was developed in R using R Shiny App. It allows the systematic coding of protest images shared on social media. It guides coders through a structured process and stores the input provided efficiently.
Papers
The first paper based on the dataset examines how protest camp infrastructure influences protest participation of vulnerable groups. We find that a professionalized camp logistic (i.e. toilet, food, medical aid) significantly increases participation – more so than other factors like the time of day do. In addition, we work on papers that examine protest through different dimensions, trying to understand sustained mobilization or link emotional discourse to protest violence and engage with elite conflict as a key determinant of camp infrastructure.