I am a political sociologist who studies social movements, civil society, organizations, and nationalism. I work as a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Civil Society Research at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center.
Before joining the WZB, I was a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Sociology at Freie Universität Berlin with a scholarship by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. At Freie Universität, I investigated the role of protest and social movement organizations in the Catalan secessionist conflict. In October 2021 I received my PhD in Political Science and Sociology from the Scuola Normale Superiore in Florence. I studied political science and sociology in Madrid, Marburg, and Madison (Wisconsin) and was a visiting researcher at the University of Barcelona, the University of Gothenburg, and Technical University Berlin.
I am a political sociologist researching social movements, civil society, organizations, and nationalism. I work as a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Civil Society Research at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center.
Before joining the WZB, I was a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Sociology at Freie Universität Berlin with a scholarship by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. At Freie Universität, I investigated the role of protest and social movement organizations in the Catalan secessionist conflict.
In October 2021 I received my PhD in Political Science and Sociology from the Scuola Normale Superiore in Florence. I studied political science and sociology in Madrid, Marburg, and Madison (Wisconsin) and was a visiting researcher at the University of Barcelona, the University of Gothenburg, and Technical University Berlin.
Beyond the state and the market, people join forces for a range of political and civic purposes. I am interested in both the “moving” side of civil society, such as protests and activism, as well as the “stable” side, such as associations, trade unions, and churches.
How is collective action possible? Organizational processes, practices, and structures bring people together to achieve their goals. My research tries to understand how people organize – and how organization changes over time.
Nationalist frames and ideologies drive many political actors. Within this broad category, I have focused primarily on two specific phenomena that have little in common with each other: Secessionist movements and the far right.
Civil society is often seen as a bulwark against the far right. However, civil society has become an increasingly contentious arena. Established civil society organizations have become targets of far-right interventions in recent years. This has led to the emergence of new organizations as well as divides within existing civil society organizations. The project “Organized Civil Society and Far-Right Interventions” investigates new forms of politicization and how established organizations respond to them.
The project employs a mixed-methods design combining quantitative content analyses of newspapers with qualitative case studies. The project selects cases from eight organizational areas to cover the full breadth of German civil society: labor, religion, welfare, firefighting, shooting sports (“Schützenwesen”), environmental protection, culture, and sports.
Funding:
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF)
Duration: 2023 – 2026
Work in progress:
Hans Jonas Gunzelmann, Christin Jänicke:
Mapping Far-Right Contention in Germany
The success of the far right in parliaments across Europe and the increase of far-right violence posits the question of what civil society can do to stop this trend. However, both in the public debate and in academic research, the focus is narrowed to parties and their strategies as well as the protection of institutions such as the courts. Even though the social sciences are discussing the effects of different strategies on the rise of the far right, there is still a lack of systematic overviews of civil society strategies. The transfer project “Effective against the far right” addresses this gap by linking scientific evidence, civil society experience, and practical recommendations for action in a transdisciplinary framework. The aim is to develop and communicate the current state of knowledge in civil society and academia.
Funding: Friends of the WZB e.V.
Duration: 2024 – 2025
Work in progress:
Jänicke, Christin; Teresa Völker, Hans Jonas Gunzelmann:
Civil Society Action Against the Far Right: A Systematic Review
Independence protests are on the rise across Europe, as Spain, the UK, and other states have faced experienced severe secessionist crises. This project investigates how these protests are organized and how they change over time. Focusing on the case of Catalonia, the project explores how the 2017 referendum crisis impacted the independence movement.
It combines protest event data, qualitative interviews, and network analyses to show how organizational change took place inside, outside, and between formal organizations, and was driven by activists’ symbolic constructions of transformative events. The project goes beyond previous research on secessionist protest by providing a dynamic perspective on strategic interactions between protesters and their opponents and allies.
Funding:
Scuola Normale Superiore,
Fritz Thyssen Foundation
Duration: 2017 – 2024
Gunzelmann, Hans Jonas. Forthcoming.
Organizing for Independence. Secessionist Protest, Organizational Change, and the Referendum Crisis in Catalonia.
Amsterdam University Press.
Gunzelmann, Hans Jonas. 2024.
“How Critical Junctures Shape Secessionist Movement Cohesion: Strategies, Framing Processes, and Interorganizational Relations before and after the 2017 Referendum in Catalonia.”
Journal of Peace Research
Gunzelmann, Hans Jonas. 2024.
“Counter-surveillant Organizing during the Secessionist Cycle of Contention in Catalonia”
Social Movement Studies. 23(5): Pp. 623-639.
Della Porta, Donatella, Hans Jonas Gunzelmann, and Martín Portos. 2021.
“Repression and Democracy Amidst the Eventful 1-O Referendum.“
Pp. 127–50 in Catalan Independence and the Crisis of Sovereignty, edited by Ó. G. Agustín.
Cham: Springer International Publishing
Secessionist Protest, Organizational Change, and the Referendum Crisis in Catalonia
Independence protests are on the rise across Europe, as Spain, the UK, and other states have faced severe secessionist challenges. The largest wave of these protests swept Catalonia and reached its peak in 2017 when the push for a binding referendum led to an unprecedented secessionist crisis. Organizing for Independence explores the question of how the referendum crisis as a threat and opportunity transformed secessionist protest and its organizational basis. Combining protest event data, qualitative interviews, and network analyses, Hans Jonas Gunzelmann shows how organizational change took place inside, outside, and between formal organizations, and was driven by activists’ symbolic constructions of transformative events. The book goes beyond simplistic accounts of secessionist protest by providing a dynamic perspective on strategic interactions between protesters and their opponents and allies. These insights are particularly timely as independence movements all over the world look with great interest at what happened in Catalonia.
M.A. Seminar (co-taught with Swen Hutter)
Freie Universität Berlin
M.A. Seminar (co-taught with Swen Hutter and Christin Jänicke)
Freie Universität Berlin
B.A. Tutorium
Philipps-Universität Marburg
B.A. Tutorium
Philipps-Universität Marburg
WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Center for Civil Society Research
Freie Universität Berlin
Department of Sociology
Scuola Normale Superiore
Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
Philipps-Universität Marburg
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Departments of Political Science and Sociology
Philipps-Universität Marburg