Category: Nonviolent Action

October 24, 2014October 24, 2014
Post

James Lawson Award Honors Four Resisters

Nathan Schneider     June 23, 2011 Yesterday the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict presented its first James Lawson Award for Nonviolent Achievement—or, rather, awards. The ceremony took place over lunch in a multi-purpose room at Tufts University, midway through ICNC’s annual, week-long Fletcher Summer Institute for the Advanced Study of Nonviolent Conflict. All four Lawson Award...

October 23, 2014October 23, 2014
Post

Pillars of Power: How Ordinary People Can Bring Down a Government

October 23, 2014 How have regular people, again and again throughout history, overcome brutal authoritarian or colonial governments using only nonviolent weapons? One of the most fundamental concepts behind how nonviolent action works is that every government – even the most dictatorial – relies on institutions and groups in society to provide them with the...

September 26, 2014September 26, 2014
Post

Molecules of Freedom: The Scope for Small Acts of Resistance in Tibet

Tenzin Dorjee, September 26, 2014 In 2009, I was attending a training on ‘strategic nonviolence’ at Tufts University. There were about 50 activists in attendance from the unfree world. During the workshops led by former revolutionaries and scholars of nonviolent resistance, one Egyptian activist kept insisting that none of the strategies and tactics in question...

September 21, 2014September 21, 2014
Post

Molecules of Freedom: The Scope for Small Acts of Resistance in Tibet

Tenzin Dorjee, September 26, 2014   In 2009, I was attending a training on ‘strategic nonviolence’ at Tufts University. There were about 50 activists in attendance from the unfree world. During the workshops led by former revolutionaries and scholars of nonviolent resistance, one Egyptian activist kept insisting that none of the strategies and tactics in...

September 17, 2014September 17, 2014
Post

Why We Must Protest – Part II

Lhadon Tethong, September 17, 2014 On the eve of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to India, I wanted to share a few more thoughts on the importance of protest. Resistance is not the cause of repression. Our protests are not the cause of China’s crackdown in Tibet. As long as there is oppression in Tibet,...

September 11, 2014September 11, 2014
Post

Why We Must Protest – Part I

Lhadon Tethong, September 11, 2014 Some people have suggested that Tibetans not protest Chinese President Xi Jinping’s upcoming trip to India. Some even say: we can protest all year long but just for now let’s give it a rest. Sadly, this is completely backwards thinking. If you want to stage an effective protest – one that...

April 16, 2014April 16, 2014
Post

Political pressure and the fight for Tibetan freedom

A few weeks ago, a very negative critique of the Tibet movement was published in the South China Morning Post. It’s one of a number of pieces lately that draw the mistaken conclusion that the terrible situation in Tibet and the excruciatingly slow pace of change mean campaigns by Tibetans and supporters outside Tibet over the...

June 24, 2012June 24, 2012
Post

James Lawson Award Honors Four Resisters

Nathan Schneider, June 23, 2011 On June 23rd, the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict presented its first James Lawson Award for Nonviolent Achievement—or, rather, awards. The ceremony took place over lunch in a multi-purpose room at Tufts University, midway through ICNC’s annual, week-long Fletcher Summer Institute for the Advanced Study of Nonviolent Conflict. All four Lawson Award...

November 15, 2011November 15, 2011
Post

NEW: Tibetan version of “Civil Resistance: A First Look” Released

Civil Resistance http://civilresistance.net/ Share this video with your friends, colleagues, and fellow organizers. Post it on your website and blogs, email it to your friends, add it to your online video libraries, and spread the knowledge of civil resistance. 

Top