Authors
Erica Chenoweth, Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham
Publication date
2013/5
Journal
Journal of Peace Research
Volume
50
Issue
3
Pages
271-276
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
The events of the Arab Spring of 2011 have made clear the importance and potential efficacy of nonviolent resistance, as well as the field’s inability to explain the onset and outcome of major nonviolent uprisings. Until recently, conflict scholars have largely ignored nonviolent resistance. This issue features new theoretical and empirical explorations of the causes and consequences of nonviolent resistance, stressing the role that unarmed, organized civilians can play in shaping the course of conflicts. Contributors demonstrate the importance of treating nonviolent and violent strategies, as well as conventional politics strategies, as alternative choices for engaging the state, show how gender ideology can influence which opposition groups use nonviolent resistance, and suggest that the causes of civil war and nonviolent resistance often differ. Other pieces highlight the role of public attitudes regarding whether …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Chenoweth, KG Cunningham - Journal of Peace Research, 2013