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Birmingham Civil Rights Institute of Birmingham, Alabama citation webpage |
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The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute is more than a museum. It is a center for education and discussion about civil and human rights issues. The Institute's projects and services promote research, provide information, and encourage discussion on human rights in America and around the world.
http://www.bcri.org/index.html |
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Resolving Identity-Based Conflict in Nations, Organizations, and Communities citation |
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This book combines a discussion of theory and practice, with Rothman covering the four phases of conflict; antagonism, resonance, invention, and action. The work offers possible avenues for transforming a wide array of conflict situations. Author: Rothman, Jay |
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Power and Struggle: The Politics of Nonviolent Action, Part One citation |
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Power and Struggle examines the nature and sources of political power, and then explores the potential for nonviolent action to serve as an effective alternative to the use of violence in controlling political power.
Author: Sharp, Gene |
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The Methods of Nonviolent Action: The Politics of Nonviolent Action, Part Two citation |
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The Methods of Nonviolent Action describes nearly two-hundred specific methods of nonviolent action.
Author: Sharp, Gene |
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The Dynamics of Nonviolent Action: The Politics of Nonviolent Action, Part Three citation |
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The Dynamics of Nonviolent Action explores the nature and processes of nonviolent action. The Dynamics of Nonviolent Action will be of interest to those who seek a better understanding of the mechanism and operation of nonviolent resistance. Author: Sharp, Gene |
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Making Europe Unconquerable citation |
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Making Europe Unconquerable argues that civilian based nonviolent deterrence and defense is a viable alternative to conventional military approaches to national security.
Author: Sharp, Gene |
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Exploring Nonviolent Alternatives citation |
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Exploring Nonviolent Alternatives examines potential for techniques of nonviolent resistance to replace reliance on violence as the means of final resort in conflict.
Author: Sharp, Gene |
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Nonviolent Direct Action; American Cases: Social-Psychological Analyses citation |
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No Description Available. Author: Hare, A. Paul |
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Justice Without Violence citation |
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"A well-integrated mixture of theoretical analysis and case studies (from Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East), the book examines nonviolent direct action, political action, economic sanctions, and social movements as alternative remedies in the struggle for justice." Author: Wehr, Paul, ed. |
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The Power Of Nonviolence 3rd Edition citation |
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"The American Quaker Richard B. Gregg, the early western interpreter of Gandhi. Gregg's popular tract was first published in 1935.(18) Gregg was a lawyer, industrial relations mediator and publicist, who had spent some years in India. His book was based primarily on the thought and experience of Gandhi, to whom it is dedicated. It alluded but only thinly to earlier successful nonviolent actions.(19)"
Author: Gregg, Richard B. |