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  1. frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk

    Oxfam's Ed Cairns explores the evidence and experience on violence v non violence as a way of bringing about social change. One of the perennial themes of this blog is the idea that crises may provide an opportunity for progressive change. True. But I've always been nervous that such hopes can forget that most conflicts cause far more human misery than any good that may come.
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  3. news.harvard.edu

    She had studied terrorism, civil war, and major revolutions — Russian, French, Algerian, and American — and suspected that only violent force had achieved major social and political change. But then a workshop led her to consider proving that violent resistance was more successful than the nonviolent kind.
  4. cc4change.com

    The collaborative blog post discusses the strategic use of violence and nonviolence in achieving social change. Mark emphasizes disrupting oppressive social structures through sabotage, while Pat advocates for nonviolent resistance and the reevaluation of violence as a means of liberation. They acknowledge the complexities and moral implications of their respective approaches.
  5. hls.harvard.edu

    We have seen the damage that violence does to our collective humanity and I think there better options," said Gamawa. S.J.D. candidate Mekkonen Firew Ayano agreed, saying, "We know that some of the most durable social and political change comes from nonviolent means."
  6. countercurrents.org

    In history there has been a long debate between violence and non-violence in the context of social movements. Some very great persons who brought very beneficial and durable change chose the path ...
  7. 23 Chiu, 2019, makes this explicit in the Hong Kong context: "In contrast, non-violent movements attract many more supporters and benefit from government violence.While hundreds of Hong Kong protesters have been violent, millions have demonstrated peacefully. Furthermore, millions more supporters will not demonstrate but will donate money, strike, boycott or share information on social media ...
  8. People have come up with lots of different approaches. Here are some: ... A second approach to social change is through using violence. At the international level, this includes using military force to threaten or attack another country, defeating ... thrive without violence and without domination. Gandhi called this the constructive program.
  9. nonviolentcommunication.com

    Facilitate Communication and Compassion in Social Change. People who want different kinds of social change — and people who resist social change — are driven by what is important to them. At a deeper level, we refer to these in NVC as Universal Human Needs. Social institutions, systems, and structures are sets of strategies intended to meet ...
  10. mlksaratoga.org

    Nonviolence accepts suffering without retaliation. Unearned suffering is redemptive and has tremendous educational and transforming possibilities. Principle Five: Nonviolence chooses love instead of hate. Nonviolence resists violence of the spirit, as well as the body. Nonviolent love is spontaneous, unmotivated, unselfish and creative ...
  11. documents.uow.edu.au

    2.2 Violence . A second approach to social change is through using violence. At the international level, this includes using military force to threaten or attack another country, defeating the other country's military forces in a war and taking control of the government, corporations and so forth.
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