Category: Strategy

རྫ་སྟོད་མི་མང་གིས་གཏེར་སྔོག་ཚོང་ལས་ཁང་དང་རུལ་སུངས་དཔོན་རིགས་རྣམས་ལ་ཁ་གཏད་བཅག་པ།
October 20, 2016November 22, 2017
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རྫ་སྟོད་མི་མང་གིས་གཏེར་སྔོག་ཚོང་ལས་ཁང་དང་རུལ་སུངས་དཔོན་རིགས་རྣམས་ལ་ཁ་གཏད་བཅག་པ།

འདི་རུ་ང་ཚོས་རྫ་སྟོད་མི་མང་གི་གྲུབ་འབྲས་ལྡན་པའི་ལོ་རྒྱུས་རྨང་གཞིར་བྱས་པའི་འགུལ་རིས་ཀྱི་གཏམ་རྒྱུད་དེ་ངོ་སྤྲོད་ཞུ་གི་ཡིན། གཏམ་རྒྱུད་འདིའི་བརྗོད་སྙིང་ནི། རྫ་སྟོད་མི་མང་གིས་སོ་སོའི་ས་ཁུལ་གྱི་གནས་རྩ་ཆེན་དག་སྲུང་སྐྱོབ་ཀྱི་ཆེད་དུ་གཏེར་ཁ་བསྔོགས་འདོན་བྱེད་མཁན་གྱི་བཟོ་གྲྭ་ཁག་དང་ལྐོག་ཟ་རུལ་སུངས་ཅན་གྱི་ལས་བྱེད་རྣམས་ཕམ་པར་བརྒྱབ་པའི་སྐོར་ཡིན།

Zatoe vs Mining Companies and Corrupt Officials
October 13, 2016November 22, 2017
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Zatoe vs Mining Companies and Corrupt Officials

[བོད་ཡིག] We are excited to introduce our first-ever illustrated story today, telling the inspiring tale of Tibetans in Zatoe, who overcame corrupt officials and profit-hungry mining companies to secure protection of their sacred mountains in 2014.

Captain Boycott and the Tactic that Changed the World
September 14, 2016November 22, 2017
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Captain Boycott and the Tactic that Changed the World

[བོད་ཡིག] The boycott is one of the most well-known nonviolent resistance tactics, and it can also be one of the most powerful. To carry out a boycott, people don’t have to gather together in a single place or engage in high-risk actions. Due to the low risk involved, lots of people can take part, building...

Tactics of Concentration and Dispersion
December 14, 2015November 22, 2017
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Tactics of Concentration and Dispersion

To Concentrate or to Disperse One useful way of classifying the various nonviolent tactics is to divide them into tactics of concentration and tactics of dispersion. For example, protest demonstrations or rallies are tactics of concentration, because they tend to concentrate hundreds or thousands of people in one location. Tactics of dispersion, on the contrary, are...

Strategy and Tactics
October 28, 2015January 14, 2020
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Strategy and Tactics

October 28, 2015 ‘Strategy’ and ‘tactics’ are two words that many people often use interchangeably, as if they were synonyms. But actually they mean very different things. If we don’t understand the difference between these two words, we’ll end up making some serious mistakes in life as well as in our struggle. In this video,...

September 14, 2015September 14, 2015
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It’s Time for Obama to Confront Xi on Tibet and Human Rights

Lhadon Tethong, September 13, 2015 Chinese President Xi Jinping will be in the U.S. for his first official state visit later this month. As President Obama prepares to receive him at the White House with a state dinner and a 21-gun salute, Xi’s regime is carrying out an unprecedented attack on Tibetans and civil society...

April 8, 2015April 8, 2015
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How Does Nonviolent Change Happen?

To most people, the process by which change occurs is a great mystery that takes place inside the black box of politics. Most of the time, those pushing for political change recognize the important ingredients that go into the process and the outcome that results from it. But between the input of ingredients and the...

March 9, 2015March 9, 2015
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Top 10 Reasons World Leaders Should Meet with the Dalai Lama

1. It’s the right thing to do. The Dalai Lama is a Nobel Peace laureate, one of the foremost symbols of nonviolence in the history of humankind and the leader of an ancient nation being violently oppressed by China. Enough said. 2. Shines a global spotlight on Tibet, one of the darkest corners of the...

December 17, 2014December 17, 2014
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Nothing To Laugh At: The Role of Humor in Tibetan Resistance

Tenzin Dorjee, December 17, 2014 The Tibetan sense of humor is often blunt rather than sharp, wide rather than deep. Our humor usually consists of laughing at other people’s tragedies (Sonam stepped on a banana peel and fell on his butt, hahaha!) or laughing at unfunny jokes. I’d be the first to admit that ours is...

December 3, 2014December 3, 2014
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Costs & Benefits of China’s Occupation of Tibet

December 3, 2014 Why does China occupy Tibet? Tendor illustrates the simple but powerful idea of cost and benefit analysis in a new video, and explains why every campaign and tactic the Tibet movement takes on needs to drive the costs of China’s occupation up and the benefits down.

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