Social Movement Outcomes
The atlas starts from outcome scholarship, then changes the unit.
The key shift is from a database about studies of movement outcomes to a navigable memory of campaigns, tactics, formal records, and plausible effects.
A field map of the datasets, civic tools, and social-movement research this atlas builds on.
The key shift is from a database about studies of movement outcomes to a navigable memory of campaigns, tactics, formal records, and plausible effects.
Fork the repository, inspect the files, or propose sources and cases for review.
Existing tools usually cover one lane. The atlas joins the lanes.
Actions, dates, actors
Bills, rezonings, courts
Pressure and strategy
Change or no change
How strong is the claim?
Neighboring projects, grouped by what they help establish.
Closest conceptual precedent; literature organized by outcomes and mechanisms.
Large resistance-campaign outcomes dataset.
Date, location, actors, event type, incident characteristics.
US protest records and crowd estimates.
Protest discovery and public statistics.
Bills, status, and legislative monitoring.
Bill alerts, opinions to lawmakers, vote tracking.
Public input around legislation.
Supporter mobilization and campaign reporting.
Advocate engagement and lawmaker outreach.
Pattern language for tactics, principles, and stories.
Tactic guides, examples, case studies, resources.
Local meeting videos, metadata, transcripts.
Public comment process and influence limits.
Harder than counting events.
Records live across agencies, courts, news, and archives.
Every case needs sources, limits, and revision paths.