lang: en
Summary
The deliberate sequencing of tactics from low-cost/high-volume to high-cost/high-risk, so each step raises the cost of the target’s inaction and creates the base for the next.
Body
Escalation is the deliberate sequencing of tactics from low-cost/high-volume to high-cost/high-risk, so that each step raises the cost of the target’s inaction and creates a base for the next step.
A campaign typically escalates in three broad waves: visible-but-routine (petitions, open letters, social-media moments), disruptive (strikes, boycotts, sit-ins), and confrontational (blockades, occupations, mass civil disobedience). The Commons Library sequences escalation as a campaign-design decision, not an accident — each tactic is chosen because the next one will be unavailable without the political space the current one creates [source: commons-library]. Beautiful Trouble applies the same logic to creative actions: each tactic should make the next, more ambitious one possible [source: beautiful-trouble]. ICNC treats escalation as one of the core dynamics of civil resistance, alongside pillars and discipline [source: icnc]. Sharp’s full taxonomy of 198 methods (see methods-of-nonviolent-action) provides the menu from which any escalation sequence draws. Escalation only works when the campaign has built enough base (people, money, allies) to absorb the costs of each step. Escalating without a base is performance.
Examples
Examples
- Cubans general strike to overthrow president, 1933 — Farm workers’ strike [TRUNC] By August 9, 1933, the general strike campaign 1933 · Latin America
- Harvard University community campaigns for divestment from apartheid South Africa, 1977-1989 — The campaign demanded that the university completely divest its investments 1977-1989 · North America
- Latvians campaign for national independence, 1989-1991 — Despite previous nonviolent resistance to Soviet occupation, rallies in August 1989-1991 · Europe
- Mexican citizens massively protest presidential election results, 2006 — Also, the protests grew during the campaign and covered a large geographical 2006 · North America
- Polish workers general strike for economic rights, 1980 — Economic Justice. Classification. Change. Group characterization [TRUNC] 1980 · Europe
Use it for
Designing the campaign arc; choosing the next tactic when the current one is succeeding; deciding when an issue campaign needs to escalate beyond normal politics.
Worked examples
- case-studies/campact-model
- case-studies/fridays-for-future
- case-studies/gezi-park
- case-studies/idle-no-more
- case-studies/montgomery-bus-boycott
- case-studies/otpor-milosevic
- sindicato-inquilinas
- case-studies/sunrise-green-new-deal
- case-studies/umbrella-movement
Related
- the-campaign-cycle
- nonviolent-direct-action
- petitions-and-e-campaigning
- dilemma-actions
- beautiful-trouble
- commons-library
- icnc
- methods-of-nonviolent-action
Summary
TBD — distil a 2-4 sentence summary from Body.
Open Questions
None yet.
Sources & verification
- commons-library — grounding: secondary — RAW (5257 chars)
- beautiful-trouble — grounding: secondary — RAW (2589 chars)
- icnc — grounding: secondary — RAW (15436 chars)
Verified 2026-06-23 by llm-qc.