Results 221 to 230 of about 28,270 (267)
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Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2019
Militant groups are usually committed to violent tactics to pursue their goals. Yet, in certain cases, militants adopt nonviolent tactics and desist from violence. As internal conflict rarely remains isolated from outside influence, I argue that external
M. Petrova
semanticscholar +1 more source
Militant groups are usually committed to violent tactics to pursue their goals. Yet, in certain cases, militants adopt nonviolent tactics and desist from violence. As internal conflict rarely remains isolated from outside influence, I argue that external
M. Petrova
semanticscholar +1 more source
, 2020
This paper complements pedagogical efforts of foregrounding nonviolence on inner reflexive work with approaches that highlight notions of nonviolence as both subjective and collective resistance to the norms and structures of social injustice and ...
Michalinos Zembylas
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This paper complements pedagogical efforts of foregrounding nonviolence on inner reflexive work with approaches that highlight notions of nonviolence as both subjective and collective resistance to the norms and structures of social injustice and ...
Michalinos Zembylas
semanticscholar +1 more source
Slow nonviolence: Muslim women resisting the everyday violence of dispossession and marginalization
Environment and Planning C Politics and Space, 2019This paper draws upon ethnographic research with Muslim communities in Hyderabad, India and South Asian Muslim American communities in Seattle, USA, showcasing the work of grassroots women’s organizations that negotiate and theorize tangled webs of ...
Amy Piedalue
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Futures, 2001
Nonviolent action - including methods such as rallies, strikes, boycotts and sit-ins - has become increasingly important in the past century as a method for waging conflict and promoting social change. Nonviolent action has been adopted by many social movements, yet its potential impact has only begun to be realised.
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Nonviolent action - including methods such as rallies, strikes, boycotts and sit-ins - has become increasingly important in the past century as a method for waging conflict and promoting social change. Nonviolent action has been adopted by many social movements, yet its potential impact has only begun to be realised.
openaire +2 more sources
Contemporary Psychology, 1996
Doing justice to ...
Goldstein, J.H., Mlicki, P.P.
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Doing justice to ...
Goldstein, J.H., Mlicki, P.P.
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2010
Recent decades have witnessed a dramatic upsurge in the use of strategic nonviolent action as a method of political struggle worldwide, pressing governments and other institutions to change policies and even successfully ousting autocratic regimes.
Stephen Zunes +2 more
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Recent decades have witnessed a dramatic upsurge in the use of strategic nonviolent action as a method of political struggle worldwide, pressing governments and other institutions to change policies and even successfully ousting autocratic regimes.
Stephen Zunes +2 more
openaire +1 more source
The force of nonviolence: An ethico-political bind
Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies, 2021Johannes Renders
semanticscholar +1 more source
Religious Traditions, Violence and Nonviolence
Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, & Conflict, 2022Michael J. Mcclymond, D. N. Freedman
semanticscholar +1 more source

