Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2018

“JOB-KILLER” BILLS IN TOUGH ECONOMIC TIMES: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND LEAVE-POLICY AGENDAS BEFORE AND AFTER THE GREAT RECESSION*

Page Range: 329 – 347
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-23-3-329
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How do economic conditions influence social movements' capacity to set legislative agendas? This research examines multiple efforts to expand family, medical, and sick leave policies in California across almost two decades spanning the Great Recession. Longitudinal analysis in a state with political conditions favorable to leave policy agendas permits close consideration of how varying economic conditions shape social movement influence in the policy process. Drawing from various qualitative sources, this research finds that, after the recession, leave bills were more often held in appropriations committees for their estimated costs to the state and anticipated pressures on funding sources. Weak economic conditions also shifted leave advocates' priorities away from leave policy issues toward maintaining public employment and services. The article advances social movement research by showing the mechanisms by which state fiscal capacity shapes social movement strategies and interacts with political conditions at the early, agenda-setting stages of the legislative process.

Copyright: © 2018 Mobilization: An International Quarterly 2018

Contributor Notes

* I thank California leave advocates for taking time out of their busy schedules to participate in interviews. Funding for this research was provided by the Flacks Fund for the Study of Democratic Possibilities at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Additionally, I thank Hillary Blackerby, David Brady, Maria Charles, Jennifer Earl, Daraka Larimore-Hall, Nelson Lichtenstein, Fernando Lopez-Alves, Jennifer Rogers-Brown, and Katrin Uba for their helpful suggestions on drafts at various stages, and editors and reviewers at Mobilization for their constructive feedback. Online appendix for the article is available at https://osf.io/6d2c3/?view_only=33bb2d6680cb49ef8a507facbed6a09b.

Cassandra Engeman is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Swedish Institute for Social Research at Stockholm University.

Please direct all correspondence to cassandra.engeman@sofi.su.se.
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