Civil disobedience: Difference between revisions
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*[https://www.macleans.ca/society/environment/inside-the-student-led-movements-urging-canadian-universities-to-divest-from-fossil-fuels/ University student sit-ins], whether in university centres, board member's offices, meeting spaces etc., to pressure their universities to divest from fossil fuels. | *[https://www.macleans.ca/society/environment/inside-the-student-led-movements-urging-canadian-universities-to-divest-from-fossil-fuels/ University student sit-ins], whether in university centres, board member's offices, meeting spaces etc., to pressure their universities to divest from fossil fuels. | ||
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Revision as of 15:16, 19 October 2022
Civil disobedience is an active and often public nonviolent violation of particular laws, decrees, regulations, ordinances, military or police commands and other orders. This is usually done in protest of laws or orders which are regarded as immoral, unjust, or tyrannical and with the expectation and acceptance by the perpetrator(s) of the legal consequences of this disobedience. Sometimes an individual or group may disobey a particular law as a symbol of opposition to wider policies of the government, or the government’s rule itself. -Gene Sharp [1]
Civil disobedience involves "breaking a law in public in order to challenge the moral legitimacy of that specific law (e.g. racial segregation) or a greater injustice committed by the state (e.g. corruption)." -Beautiful Trouble [2]
Examples of Direct actions that Used Civil Disobedience in so-called Canada
Blockades |
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Sit-ins |
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