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Social JusticeNonviolent resistance (or 'nonviolent action') is the practice of applying power to achieve socio-political goals through symbolic protests, economic or political noncooperation, civil disobedience and other methods, without the use of physical violence.
Like other strategies for social change, nonviolent action can appear in various forms and degrees. It may include information wars, protest art, lobbying, tax refusal, boycotts or sanctions, legal/diplomatic wrestling, material sabotage, underground railroads, principled refusal of awards/honours, picketing , vigiling, leafletting, and/or general strikes.
Some scholars of nonviolence, arguing that many movements have pragmatically adopted the methods of nonviolent action as an effective way to achieve social or political goals, distinguish the methods of nonviolent action from the moral stance of nonviolence or non-harm towards others.
Gene Sharp has identified 198 methods of nonviolent action which may be used to defend countries from invasion, undermine dictatorships, block coups d'etat or challenge unjust social systems. They include:
- symbolic protests
- hunger strike
- paralysis of transportation
- social boycotts
- specific and general strikes
- civil disobedience
- economic shutdowns
- political noncooperation
- "disappearance" under false identity
- economic boycotts
- public demonstrationA demonstration is the public display of the common opinion of a activist group, often economically, political, or socially, by gathering in a crowd, usually at a symbolic place or date, associated with that opinion. The purpose of a demonstration is to ss
- slow-downs
- publication of banned newspaperBrookgreen Gardens Pawleys Island, South Carolina A newspaper is a lightweight and disposable publication, usually printed on low-cost paper called newsprint, containing a journal of current news in a variety of topics. These topics can include politicals
- deliberate inefficiencies
- assistance to persecuted people
- broadcasts about resistance on radioFor other uses see: radio (disambiguation Radio is a technology that allows the transmission of signals by modulation of electromagnetic waves with frequencies below those of light. Radio waves Radio waves are a form of electromagnetic radiation, and are and televisionSee TV (disambiguation) for other uses and Television (band) for the rock band Television is a telecommunication system for broadcasting and receiving moving pictures and sound over a distance. The term has come to refer to all the aspects of television p
- judicial resistance
- defiance by the governmentA government is an organization that has the power to make and enforce laws for a certain territory. There are several definitions on what exactly constitutes a government. The government has been defined as the dominant decision-making arm (the policy el
- denial of legitimacy to the usurper s
- non-cooperation of civil servantsA civil servant or public servant is a civilian career public-sector employee working for a government department or agency. Further workers in non-departmental public bodies may also be classed as civil servants for the purpose of producing statistics.
- legislative procrastination and delays
- declaration of defiance
- persistent continuation of old policies and laws
- student defiance
- children's demonstrations
- individual and mass resignations
- refusal of collaboration
- maintenance of autonomy of independent organizations and institutions
- subversion of the usurpers' troops, and incitement to them to mutiny
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