Abstract
The authors consider how uncertainty over protest occurrence shapes the strategic interaction between companies and activists. Analyzing Wal‐Mart, the authors find support for their theory that companies respond to this uncertainty through a “test for protest” approach. In Wal‐Mart’s case, this consists of low‐cost probes in the form of new store proposals. They then withdraw if they face protests, especially when those protests signal future problems. Wal‐Mart is more likely to open stores that are particularly profitable, even if they are protested. This uncertainty‐based account stands in sharp contrast to full‐information models that characterize protests as rare miscalculations.
Full Citation
Ingram, Paul, Lori Yue, and Hayagreeva Rao. “Trouble in Store: The Emergence and Success of Protests against Wal-Mart Store Openings in America.”
American Journal of Sociology
vol. 116,
no.
1
(July 01, 2010): 53-92.