AN INTERSECTIONAL THEORY OF STRATEGIC DECISIONS: MUSLIM AMERICAN IMMIGRANTS AND THE DILEMMAS OF POLICING*
When faced with a collective dilemma, why do individuals from the same group perceive their strategic choices differently? A growing actor-centered stream of social movements research shows that strategic decision making is a cultural process where actors decide upon a strategy by drawing on past experiences to make sense of the present and anticipate what might happen if they act in a particular way. However, actors’ past experiences are not only contextual and variable, they are also patterned by social location. It is in these patterns that we can better understand the relationship between structure and agency in processes of social change. Integrating an intersectional framework, I draw on evidence from forty focus groups with about 200 Muslim community members discussing the policing of Muslim communities. I find that perceptions of agency are patterned across intersections of race and ethnicity, gender, class, and nativity, driving three central interpretations of the dilemma and strategic decisions: fear and disengagement; anger and grassroots mobilization against police; and neutrality and collaboration with police.
Contributor Notes
*Direct Correspondence to Hajar Yazdiha, Assistant Professor of Sociology. Department of Sociology, University of Southern California 851 Downey Way HSH 314 Los Angeles, CA 90089-1059, hyazdiha@usc.edu
†I offer the greatest thanks to the participants of this study. I also thank collaborators on the larger study: Charlie Kurzman, David Schanzer, and Ahsan Kamal (NIJ 2012-ZA-BX-0002) and the Philip Kayal Arab American Research Fund. I am grateful to special issue editors Zakiya Luna, Sujatha Jesudason, and Mimi Kim, and the anonymous reviewers for their incisive critiques and thoughtful feedback. Previous versions of this article were presented at the UC Irvine Sociology Colloquium Series, the 2018 Junior Theorists Symposium, the 2019 American Sociological Association conference in New York City, and the 2020 Gender/Power/Theory Workshop, with extra thanks to discussants Nina Eliasoph and Celene Reynolds.