November 2013
In 2008, Erica Chenoweth published a study comparing 323 violent and non-violent civil resistance campaigns between 1900 and 2006. Among her findings:
- Non-violent campaigns worldwide were twice as likely to succeed as violent insurgencies.
- This trend is increasing — in the last 50 years civil resistance has become increasingly frequent and effective, while violent insurgencies have become increasingly rare and unsuccessful.
- Campaigns were successful once they'd achieved the active and sustained participation of just 3.5% of the population — and many succeeded with far less than that.
- Every single campaign that surpassed the 3.5% threshold was a nonviolent one.
- Campaigns that relied solely on non-violent methods were on average four times larger than the average violent campaign — and much more diverse and inclusive.
Erica presented her research at TEDxBoulder last month:
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フレーム]
She's also posted an FAQ and a transcript of her talk along with links and footnotes.
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7 November 2013 |
LINK | Filed in
video
The arts community is missing a great chance to push ballet initiatives today in NYC.
#NYC2013
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5 November 2013 |
LINK | Filed in
election,
nyc
Heard about that big corporate settlement for defrauding the public?
It’s tax deductible — paid for by the public.
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5 November 2013 |
LINK | Filed in
gov
On to December.
Back to October.