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Symposium: On Nonviolence - A Force More Powerful
Articles from APSA Journals
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This symposium, featured as part of the June 2000 issue (Vol. 33, Number 2) of PS: Political Science and Politics, contains articles that explore the relationship between nonviolent collective action and the evolution and development of democratic societies.
"Editor's Note: Mobilization and Democracy" - also contains short bios on Symposium contributors Robert J-P. Hauck (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Nonviolent Power in the Twentieth Century" Peter Ackerman; Jack DuVall (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Nonviolence as Contentious Interaction" Doug McAdam; Sidney Tarrow (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Nonviolence in Ethnopolitics: Strategies for the Attainment of Group Rights and Autonomy" Ted Robert Gurr (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Blurred Lines: Nonviolence in South Africa" Gay W. Seidman (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Upon This Rock: The Black Church, Nonviolence, and the Civil Rights Movement" Allison Calhoun-Brown (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Women's Movements and Nonviolence" Anne N. Costain (PS, Jun. 2000)
"Nonviolent Action and Human Rights" Stephen Zunes (PS, Jun. 2000)
These archives contain selected articles for public view from the APSA journals American Political Science Review, PS: Political Science & Politics, and Perspectives on Politics.
APSA journals are fully accessible online to APSA members and institutional subscribers. For details, consult the membership pages of this site or information provided by your institution. To view only the table of contents or abstracts from this or any of APSA's journals, please go our publisher's website: Cambridge University Press (http://journals.cambridge.org).
These articles may be used for personal, non-commercial, or limited classroom use. For permissions for all other uses of this article please contact Cambridge University Press at permissions@cup.org.
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