On the Role of Violence and Non-Violence in the Development of the American Civil Rights Movement (original) (raw)
The Civil Rights-Black Power Era, Direct Action, and Defensive Violence: Lessons for the Working-Class Today.
John Asimakopoulos
2010
View PDFchevron_right
Violence and/or Nonviolence in the Success of the Civil Rights Movement: The Malcolm X–Martin Luther King, Jr. Nexus
August Nimtz
New Political Science, 2016
View PDFchevron_right
Selma to Montgomery: The theory, causation, significance, and legacy of a Nonviolent Social Movement in 1960s America
Joe Wood
Selma to Montgomery: Nonviolent movement analysis and discussion, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
‘They Finally Found Out that We Really Are Men’: Violence, Non-Violence and Black Manhood in the Civil Rights Era
Simon Wendt
Gender & History, 2007
View PDFchevron_right
Civil Rights Success and the Politics of Racial Violence*
Joseph Luders
Polity, 2005
View PDFchevron_right
The Student Non-Violence Coordination Committee (SNCC) and the Civil Rights Movement of the early 1960s
Stephan Schmitt
View PDFchevron_right
Revisiting the US Civil Rights Movement: toward a more synthetic understanding of the origins of contention
Doug McAdam
Rethinking social movements: Structure, meaning, …, 2004
View PDFchevron_right
The Ballot and the Bullet: A Comparative Analysis of Armed Resistance in the Civil Rights Movement
Akinyele Umoja
Journal of Black Studies, 1999
View PDFchevron_right
SOCIAL UPRISING IN THE U.S.: ANTI-RACISM AND NONVIOLENT CIVIL RESISTANCE
PIETRO AMEGLIO PATELLA
Desinformémonos
View PDFchevron_right
1964: The Beginning of the End of Nonviolence in the Mississippi Freedom Movement
Akinyele Umoja
Radical History Review, 2003
View PDFchevron_right
The Spirit in Which You Fire the Bullet: The Debate of Violent and Non-Violent Resistance
Mikail Malik
2018
View PDFchevron_right
Power for the Powerless: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Late Theory of Civil Disobedience
Alexander Livingston
Journal of Politics, 2020
View PDFchevron_right
Restoring Justice to Civil Rights Movement Activists?: New Historiography and the “Long Civil Rights Era”
Athena Mutua
2008
View PDFchevron_right
What Works? Evidence from Research on Nonviolent Social Movements
Abigail Fuller
manchester.edu
View PDFchevron_right
We shall overcome - again: The US Civil Rights Movement Revived
Matt Clement
View PDFchevron_right
Cosmopolitan Theories of Liberation: Reconciling Nonviolent Direct Action and Black Power
Josh Rotholz
View PDFchevron_right
Riots as Civil Resistance: Rethinking the Dynamics of 'Nonviolent' Struggle
Benjamin S Case
Journal of Resistance Studies, 2018
View PDFchevron_right
Understanding Militant Non-violence within Memphis’ Modern Civil Rights Movement: The Leadership and Witness of the Rev. James M Lawson Jr
Anthony Siracusa
2007
View PDFchevron_right
Jonathan Rosenberg. How Far the Promised Land? World Affairs and the American Civil Rights Movement from the First World War to Vietnam .:How Far the Promised Land? World Affairs and the American Civil Rights Movement from the First World War to Vietnam
Francis N Nesbitt
American Historical Review, 2007
View PDFchevron_right
Nonviolence before King: The Politics of Being and the Black Freedom Struggle
Anthony Siracusa
Nonviolence before King: The Politics of Being and the Black Freedom Struggle, 2021
View PDFchevron_right
A Closer Look at the Long Civil Rights Movement
Chanelle Rose
History: Reviews of New Books, 2013
View PDFchevron_right
Political Opportunities and African‐American Protest, 1948–1997
David Jacobs
American Journal of Sociology, 2003
View PDFchevron_right
From Sit-Ins to SNCC: The Student Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s
Nicholas D Hartlep
View PDFchevron_right
‘We Shall Overrun’ - How the political, cultural and revolutionary components of the Black Power Movement influenced a collective consciousness among African Americans in the 1960s.
Matthew M J O'Brien
View PDFchevron_right
When Negroes March: Framing a Period for a Long History Civil Rights Movement 1
Nishani Frazier
View PDFchevron_right
The Limits of Egalitarianism: Radical Pacifism, Civil Rights, and the Journey of Reconciliation
Marian Mollin
2004
View PDFchevron_right
The Civil Rights movement: the fight for legal and cultural equality
David Ramati
The Civil Rights movement: the fight for legal and cultural equality, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Review of ‘A Guide to Civil Resistance: A Bibliography of Social Movements and Nonviolent Action. Volume 2’
Ellie Clement
2016
View PDFchevron_right
From the Poor People's Campaign to the Poor People's Campaign: Fifty Years of Protest in the United States
Michal Kohout
Protest in Late Modern Societies, 2023
View PDFchevron_right
Martin Luther King Jr.: An assessment of the impact of his nonviolent protest, in a violent United States, during the modern black civil rights movement, 1955 - 1968.
Desmond Saunders Jr.
View PDFchevron_right
The Non-violence Movement and Its Contradictions in the Context of History-A Review of Non-violence: A History beyond the Myth by Domenico Losurdo
Leonardo Pegoraro
International Critical Thought, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
3. Vacillators or Resisters? The Unionist Government Responses to the Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland
Gianluca De Fazio
2017
View PDFchevron_right
Violence and Nonviolence in the Rhetoric of Social Protest
Billie Murray
Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 2022
View PDFchevron_right
The Long Civil Rights Movement and the Political Uses of the Past
hall jacquelyn
The Journal of American History, 2005
View PDFchevron_right
The Paradox of Repression and Nonviolent Movements
Lee Smithey
2018
View PDFchevron_right