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E-raamat: Breaking Laws: Violence and Civil Disobedience in Protest

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  • Sari: Protest and Social Movements
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040795170
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Protest and Social Movements
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040795170
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Breaking Laws: Violence and Civil Disobedience in Protest questions the complex relationship between social movements and violence through two contrasted lenses; first through the short-lived radical left wing post 68 revolutionary violence, and secondly in the present diffusion of civil disobedience actions, often at the border between non-violence and violence. This book shows how and why violence occurs or does not, and what different meanings it can take. The short-lived extreme left revolutionary groups that grew out of May 68 and the opposition to the Vietnam War (such as the German Red Army Faction, the Italian Red Brigades, and the Japanese Red Army) are without any doubt on the violent side. More ambiguous are the burgeoning contemporary forms of "civil" disobedience, breaking the law with the aim of changing it. In theory, these efforts are associated with non-violence and self-restraint. In practice, the line is more difficult to trace, as much depends on how political players define and frame non-violence and political legitimacy.
Acknowledgements 11(10)
List of Abbreviations, Organizations, and Parties
13(8)
Introduction to Breaking Laws 21(4)
Part 1 Revolutionary Violence Experiences of Armed Struggle in France, Germany, Japan, Italy, and the United States
Isabelle Sommier
Marina Urquidi
1 Introduction to Part 1: Revolutionary Violence in Context
25(4)
2 A Subject Concealed
29(12)
Violence and Social Movements: Fragmented Analytic Traditions
29(3)
Distinguishing Terrorism and Revolutionary Violence
32(2)
The Silence Surrounding 1968
34(2)
The `1968 Years': A Cycle of Protest
36(5)
3 A Revolutionary Period?
41(20)
The International Context
41(3)
The Student Revolts
44(6)
The United States
45(1)
Japan
46(2)
Germany
48(1)
France and Italy
49(1)
The Generational Dimension of Revolt
50(2)
The Growth of the Extreme Left
52(5)
The United States
53(1)
Japan
54(1)
Germany
54(2)
France
56(1)
Italy
57(1)
The Autonomous Movement
57(4)
4 Radicalization Processes
61(24)
Repression and Countermovements
61(5)
Germany
62(1)
Italy
63(2)
Japan
65(1)
The United States
66(1)
Competition and Mutual Influences
66(9)
The United States
67(2)
Italy
69(2)
Japan
71(3)
France
74(1)
Social Isolation
75(5)
High-Risk Commitment and the Logics of Clandestine Action
80(5)
5 Strategies of Violence
85(20)
Propaganda of the Deed
86(2)
The United States
86(1)
Japan
87(1)
France
87(1)
Resistance and Urban Guerrilla Warfare
88(3)
Germany
89(1)
Italy
90(1)
The Insurrectionary Model: Taking the Attack to the Heart of the State
91(5)
Anti-Imperialism and the Transnationalization of Actions
96(9)
Germany
96(1)
France
97(3)
Japan
100(5)
6 The End of a Cycle
105(14)
Anti-Terrorist Policies
105(4)
The United States
105(1)
Japan
105(1)
France
106(1)
Germany
106(1)
Italy
107(2)
A Farewell to Arms
109(10)
Italy
109(4)
Germany
113(1)
France
113(6)
7 Conclusion to Part 1
119(4)
Part 2 Civil Disobedience
Graeme Hayes
Sylvie Ollitrault
8 Introduction to Part 2: Civil Disobedience in Perspective
123(8)
9 Definitions, Dynamics, Developments
131(24)
Theorizing Civil Disobedience
131(5)
Conscience and Collective Action, Direct and Indirect Disobedience
134(2)
Civil Disobedience as `Performative'
136(7)
Direct and Indirect Disobedience Reconsidered
137(6)
Conceptual Distinctions in Historical Overview
143(9)
Quakerism
143(2)
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
145(2)
Satyagraha According to Gandhi: Resistance of Body and Soul
147(3)
The US Civil Rights Movement (1955-1965) and Beyond
150(2)
Conclusion
152(3)
10 Genealogies and Justifications in Contemporary Movements
155(30)
Civil Disobedience in France
156(8)
The Cultural Importance of Manifestos
157(3)
Conscientious Objection and Anti-militarism
160(1)
From Larzac to Notre Dame des Landes
161(3)
Civil Disobedience in a Situation of Urgency
164(12)
Action and Emergency
166(5)
Urgency and Environmental Disobedience
171(3)
Urgency and Undocumented Migrants
174(2)
Disobedience and Neo-liberal Globalization
176(7)
Disobedience and Global Justice
177(1)
Disobedience and Professional Identities
178(5)
Conclusion
183(2)
11 Repertoires of Civil Disobedience
185(30)
The Constraints of Illegal Action
185(7)
Civil Disobedience as Technique
188(4)
Civil Disobedience and Media Representation
192(5)
Greenpeace, Reporters of Their Own Action
196(1)
Civil Disobedience, Criminal Prosecution
197(10)
Trials as Political Arenas
199(2)
Civil Disobedience and Prosecution: The Case of GANVA
201(6)
Networks of Commitment
207(2)
Disobedience and Biographical Availability
209(3)
Conclusion
212(3)
12 Negotiating the Boundaries of Violence and Non-Violence
215(26)
Property Destruction: A Form of Non-civil Disobedience?
216(6)
Justifying and Legitimizing Property Destruction
222(5)
Staging Action
227(5)
The Relational Logic of Harms
232(4)
The Semantic Construction of the Civic
236(5)
13 Conclusion to Part 2
241(12)
Biographical Notes
247(6)
France
247(1)
Germany
248(1)
Italy
249(1)
Japan
250(1)
The United States
251(2)
Bibliography 253(12)
Index 265
Isabelle Sommier is Full Professor of Political Sociology at Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne University, former director of the CRPS (Centre de recherches politiques de la Sorbonne) and currently Deputy Director of the CESSP (Centre européen de sociologie et de science politique, a fusion between CRPS and CSE Bourdieu institute). She has published on the theory of social movements, political violence, radicalization and terrorism. Graeme Hayes is Reader in Political Sociology at Aston University, UK. He is joint Editor of Environmental Politics and Consulting Editor of Social Movement Studies, and has published widely on non-violent action, environmental movements, and protest traditions. Sylvie Ollitrault is Senior researcher at CNRS-France, Rennes University. She has published on French environmental movements, NGO action and protest movement. She is involved in numerous academic networks (AFSPIPSA-ECPR) on Green movements.