Organizations spend millions of dollars to encourage citizens to participate in their campaigns; however, organizations’ mobilization effectiveness has been under question. This report uses a survey-based experiment (n = 6,290) to examine the extent to which a friend’s versus an organization’s endorsement affects people’s willingness to boycott chocolate because of the use of child labor. The survey data were gathered in autumn 2019 in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Canada. We find that organizational endorsements are ineffective in influencing a subject’s willingness to participate in a boycott. Instead, prompts from friends increase the willingness to participate. Views about chocolate moderate the effectiveness of a friend’s endorsement of the boycott. The findings provide insight into the roles of organizations and interpersonal ties in mobilizing citizens to engage in political activities.
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March 2025
ARTICLES|
March 20 2025
CHOCOLATE AND POLITICS: A CROSSNATIONAL, SURVEY-BASED EXPERIMENT ON RECRUITMENT TO A BOYCOTT CAMPAIGN* Available to Purchase
Shelley Boulianne;
†Shelley Boulianne is the R. Klein Chair in Communication (full professor) at Mt. Royal University, Canada. She has held professor positions at University of Southampton, MacEwan University, and Université Catholique de Lille (France). She earned her PhD in sociology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She conducts research on media use and public opinion, as well as civic and political engagement, using meta-analysis. Nicole Houle (BA, Honours) worked as a research assistant at MacEwan University. Dr. Boulianne supervised her honour’s thesis about gender differences in political participation during the pandemic.
Direct correspondence to [email protected].
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Nicole Houle
Nicole Houle
†Shelley Boulianne is the R. Klein Chair in Communication (full professor) at Mt. Royal University, Canada. She has held professor positions at University of Southampton, MacEwan University, and Université Catholique de Lille (France). She earned her PhD in sociology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She conducts research on media use and public opinion, as well as civic and political engagement, using meta-analysis. Nicole Houle (BA, Honours) worked as a research assistant at MacEwan University. Dr. Boulianne supervised her honour’s thesis about gender differences in political participation during the pandemic.
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Mobilization: An International Quarterly (2025) 30 (1): 73–88.
Citation
Shelley Boulianne, Nicole Houle; CHOCOLATE AND POLITICS: A CROSSNATIONAL, SURVEY-BASED EXPERIMENT ON RECRUITMENT TO A BOYCOTT CAMPAIGN. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 20 March 2025; 30 (1): 73–88. doi: https://doi.org/10.17813/1086-671X-30-1-73
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