Editorial Type: ARTICLES
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Online Publication Date: 22 Sept 2025

HOW LOCAL BROKERS KEEP INTERACTION GOING: PRO-REFUGEE COMMUNITIES AFTER HEIGHTENED MOBILIZATION*

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Article Category: Research Article
Page Range: 235 – 255
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-30-3-235
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The article examines how social movements sustain interaction and survive beyond periods of heightened mobilization. Drawing on recent innovations in brokerage theory from organizational sociology, we explore the strategies employed by local brokers to create continued interaction opportunities. Our empirical analysis focuses on pro-refugee mobilization in Germany following the 2015-2016 refugee reception crisis, using 83 qualitative interviews conducted between 2020 and 2022. The interviews with volunteers, activists, and staff from the various collective actors involved in refugee support demonstrate the brokers’ diversified approach to fostering interactions within pro-refugee communities. We identify three sets of interaction opportunities involving contentious and noncontentious actions related to maintaining the core work, policy advocacy, and broadening the issue scope. Trust building with other actors, particularly local state authorities, was crucial for facilitating these opportunities. Overall, the study identifies the mechanisms and conditions necessary for sustaining social interaction in social movements during the postmobilization phase.

Copyright: © 2025 Mobilization: An International Journal 2025

Contributor Notes

* We sincerely appreciate the valuable feedback provided by the participants and discussants at the workshops “Issues and Perspectives in the Study of Social Movement Impacts” at the University of Geneva and “Relational Outcomes and Collective Action” at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Florence. In particular, we extend our gratitude to César Guzmán-Concha, Jennifer Earl, Katrin Uba, and Lorenzo Bosi for their insightful comments. We also acknowledge the generous support of the German Ministry for Research and Education, which funded our research as part of the project, “The Activated Civil Society” (Die Aktivierte Zivilgesellschaft). Additionally, we are grateful to our project colleagues for their invaluable support and constructive feedback throughout this endeavor.

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