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Re: Training Manual for MAP Activism

Posted by Manstuprator on 2025-March-30 20:11:17, Sunday
In reply to Training Manual for MAP Activism posted by beracine on 2025-March-30 13:26:44, Sunday

© 2008 Hardy Merriman.
*A slightly modified version of this essay appeared in: Conservation Biology, Volume
22, No. 2, April 2008 pp. 241-2.
1
Agents of Change and Nonviolent Action*
Nonviolent action is a way for ordinary people to fight for their rights, freedom,
and justice. It is frequently associated with moral or ethical nonviolence, but I will
address it here as a distinct phenomenon, separate from any moral or ethical
underpinnings, to expand on how it works as a pragmatic way to exert leverage in a
conflict.
Nonviolent action is based on the insight that power in a society is ultimately
derived from people’s consent and obedience. In contrast, the prevailing view is that
power in a society is inherently based on whoever has concentrated wealth and the
greatest capacity for violence. But just as the economy is a subsystem of the biosphere—
and therefore is ultimately governed by the laws of the biosphere—so too, systems of
power that are seemingly based on violence and money are actually subsystems of
thousands or millions of people’s broader behavior and obedience patterns. If those
people shift their loyalties, behavior, and obedience, the balance of power in a society,
and in the world, shifts. Simply put, if people do not obey, then rulers or corporations
cannot rule.
Nonviolent action, therefore, wields power by creating shifts in people’s loyalties,
behavior and obedience patterns at a collective level. This can happen dramatically, for
example as it did at moments during the Indian Independence Struggle, the US Civil
Rights Movement, various labor struggles (i.e. the United Farm Workers movement in
the mid-late 1960s), and the downfall of Ferdinand Marcos (1986), Augusto Pinochet
(1988), Apartheid in South Africa (1980s-90s), Slobodan Milosevic (2000), and the
authoritarian system in Ukraine (2004). Or, shifts can happen more subtly, as when
people choose to shop at locally owned businesses, boycott a product, or work to develop
alternative institutions and economies. Regardless of its myriad of methods and
manifestations, all acts of nonviolent action fall into one of three categories: acts of
commission—that is, people do things that they are not expected, supposed, or allowed to
do; acts of omission—that is, people do not do things that they are expected, supposed, or
required to do; or a combination of acts of commission and omission.1
In order to promote shifts in people’s obedience and behavior patterns, it is
important to understand why people obey and behave as they do in the first place.
Reasons will differ from society to society, but two of the most common reasons for
obedience that I encounter in my work with activists and organizers around the world are
that people feel there is no alternative way of behaving and they lack confidence that
their actions make a difference. Many people have forgotten that they are the true power
holders in their society. Of course formal education, corporations, governments, and
media all reinforce the narrative that power resides among the few individuals in a
government building or corporate headquarters, and that money and guns (on which they
have a monopoly) are the ultimate source of strength. This narrative suits their purposes
well. Successful nonviolent movements throughout history, however, have awakened
people to the fact that through their collective actions, people who are organized around a
common vision and act strategically are far stronger than armies and money. Any
contemporary grassroots movement that wants to gain traction should take note of this
fact and make reminding people that they are powerful a central point of its rhetoric.
Taking this one step further, successful movements not only tell people that they
are powerful, they demonstrate people’s power by setting clear, achievable objectives and
then documenting and publicizing their victories. The victories themselves may be
limited, but their impact on mobilizing people can be enormous. For example, the US
Civil Rights Movement concentrated its strength on desegregating buses in Montgomery,
Alabama in 1955-56 and desegregating Nashville lunch counters in 1960. The Indian
Independence Movement focused its effort on gaining concessions from the British on
the Salt Acts and others laws in 1930-31. Once achieved, these objectives were small ...
1 Gene Sharp, Waging Nonviolent Struggle: 20th Century Practice and 21st Century Potential, (Boston, MA:
Porter Sargent Publishers), 2005, p. 547.
...relative to the mammoth task of overturning segregation in the entire US South or gaining
independence in India. But their true impact was in their catalyzing effect on the
movements themselves. These victories showed people that their actions mattered and
that they were capable of making a difference, which led to great increases in support and
mobilization and propelled these movements to the national and international center
stage.
These objectives were not achieved merely because the US Civil Rights
Movement or the Indian Independence Movement occupied the moral high ground. They
were achieved also because of hard work, creativity, and skillful political analysis. This
is true of all successful nonviolent action. However, many neglect this fact and instead
assume that nonviolent action consists primarily of public protests, expressions of
outrage, and moral injunctions, or that its success depends on a charismatic leader or
some sort of mystical power. It does not. Nor does it require people who are
ideologically committed to pacifism or ethical nonviolence. What it does require is an
inclusive vision that unites people, sound strategic planning, effective public
communications, and the identification of appropriate methods for the situation. There is
no one-size-fits-all recipe—nonviolent action is place-specific. While the principles that
govern it, such as power being based on consent and obedience, are constant across all
struggles, its application depends on the context and particulars of a given society.
Whether it manifests as bold public action, subtle shifts in buying patterns, or both (most
movements have a wide variety of tactics that are designed to be used by people with
different levels of involvement), it provides a way for people to use or create political
space in their society from which to leverage concessions from an entrenched adversary.
Fortunately, a lot of intellectual work, research, and communication have been
done about how people can use, and historically have used, nonviolent action to achieve
great results. Demand for this knowledge is increasing among those who recognize the
power and potential that nonviolent action holds. You won’t read about this in most
newspapers, and you won’t find a lot of politicians talking about it, but if you talk to
grassroots organizers and members of civil society around the world, they will tell you.
They recognize that it is the people in a society who are the agents of change and that
structural change is created from the ground up. They are not waiting for a person to lead
them, because they understand that most government and corporate leaders will not take
the lead to do what is right if their populations are disengaged and do not know the means
to hold them accountable. Therefore, people around the world are increasingly looking
towards nonviolent action (which they may use in conjunction with voting, the legal
system, or other traditional means of making change) as a pragmatic way to empower
their communities to win human rights, freedom, justice, transparency, women’s,
indigenous people’s and minority rights and environmental protection. Regardless of the
objective for which nonviolent action is used, its prerequisite is the same: a reframing of
the concept of power in people’s minds. Sharing this knowledge, and awakening people
to their power, is an essential task in shifting humanity’s course.


For example, the above text is useful. It's from:
site:https://prt.civicus.org/
... just go to the site, which has choices to click on of types of information

Search sites like this:

site:https://www.nonviolent-conflict.org/ keyword
...notice the space before "keyword" and that "site:" is in small letters.

OR, FOR .PDF FILES:

site:https://www.nonviolent-conflict.org/ .PDF



The text above is from:
"CIVICUS

CIVICUS is a global alliance of civil society organisations and individuals dedicated to strengthening citizen action and civil society for a more just, inclusive and sustainable world. The alliance works to protect the fundamental civic freedoms that allow us to speak out, organise and take action. We do this by defending civic freedoms and democratic values; strengthening the power of people; and empowering a more accountable, effective and innovative civil society. We strive to promote excluded voices, especially from the Global South, and have a growing alliance of more than 8000 members in more over 175 countries.

The Protest Resilience toolkit was prepared and complied by CIVICUS, assisted by Rebecca Slip and Michael Power and Brynne Guthrie from ALT Advisory.

This publication has been produced with the kind assistance of the European Union. The contents of this publication are the sole responsibility of CIVICUS and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union."
https://prt.civicus.org/

site:https://prt.civicus.org/ keyword

site:https://prt.civicus.org/ .PDF

What would be useful is how to form "cells" of 3 or 4 people, who can communicate, but if they are discovered the whole group is not compromised.
Like the IRA did.


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