0 present participle of mobilize
1 to organize or prepare something, such as a group of people, for a purpose:
Representatives for all the main candidates are trying to mobilize voter support.
The government has mobilized several of the army's top combat units.
Troops have been mobilizing for the past three weeks.
To what extent can private motivation serve as a mobilizing force for public or societal acts?
The objet petit a and its associated register of jouissance could be seen as historically mobilizing forces common to both popular music and high modernism.
As we will see later, workers were always a site of control and discipline for the different parties involved in mobilizing them.
This difference suggests that there is some sort of difference on the mobilizing effects of oil spills and nuclear plant accidents.
Second, publicly defining the program as a national policy priority must have been regarded as an effective means of mobilizing huge amounts of foreign funding.
Mobilizing the money, labour and material in society and seeing to their being put together are important roles filled by speculative builders.
Understanding how gender works in science is crucial for both mobilizing human resources and for bringing new perspectives, priorities, and creative ferment to science.
This seemingly innocuous system for mobilizing capital prevented the accumulation of speculative funds and was, consequently, ' ' as harmless as shoe shops.