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Nonviolent Action 101
You want to understand nonviolent action as a discipline — not just one protest, but a strategic repertoire. This path threads the field from the historical and conceptual foundations through to specific tactics and the sequencing choices that decide whether a campaign wins.
This is the path to follow if you’re planning a campaign that may go beyond petitions and lobbying. If your goal is institutional change via the political process, see the [[paths/lobbying-and-advocacy|lobbying and advocacy path]] instead.
The journey
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Civil resistance — why this next: before you pick a tactic, understand the strategic logic. Civil resistance is the sustained, organised, often-disruptive use of nonviolent mass action to challenge a power-holder — distinct from one-off protests. The evidence base (NAVCO, Chenoweth) shows disciplined nonviolent campaigns have outperformed violent ones historically. This sets the frame for everything else.
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Nonviolent direct action — why this next: now the toolkit. Direct action covers sit-ins, occupations, blockades, marches — actions that directly confront the target rather than appealing to them. Knowing the spectrum lets you match tactics to campaign phase and risk tolerance.
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Escalation — why this next: a successful campaign is sequenced escalation — each step raises the cost of business-as-usual for the target. Ratchet gradually so your base grows with the stakes; jump too far too fast and you lose your coalition before you’ve built it.
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Boycotts and strikes — why this next: two of the sharpest tools in the repertoire. Boycotts attack revenue and reputation; strikes attack operations directly. Both require disciplined participation and a clear demand. This page covers how to run one that doesn’t fizzle.
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Critical path — why this next: every campaign has one event or moment that, if you win it, the rest follows. Find yours. Sequence your calendar around the critical path, not around what’s easy to organise.
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Framing and narrative — why this next: direct action is most powerful when wrapped in a story that makes your side’s morality visible and the target’s illegitimacy plain. Frames win sympathisers before the cameras roll.
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Public narrative — why this next: turn the frame into a story your people can tell in two minutes at a kitchen table. Marshall Ganz’s public-narrative craft is the bridge between strategic frame and one-to-one organising.
Wrap-up
With this path behind you, the abstract idea of “nonviolent action” is now a working repertoire: theory of change, tactical toolkit, escalation logic, and narrative craft. Browse case studies to see civil-resistance campaigns in detail, and consider the start-your-first-campaign path if you haven’t yet built the broader plan.