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Biblio

1991
The Noriega Years: US-Panama Relations 1981-1990, Scranton, Margaret E. , Boulder CO, p.245, (1991)
Charts the sharp changes in US policy from collaboration with Noriega 1981-87, and the decisions to oust him, 1987-89, and to invade October-December 1989. Also describes evolving internal politics, including elections and popular strikes and demonstrations.
Panama: The Whole Story, Buckley, Kevin , New York, p.304, (1991)
Rather sensationalist account by journalist focusing on events from the 1985 coup to the US invasion, but stressing the role of Noriega and the Panama Defence Force. Includes descriptions of popular resistance as well as elite manoeuvres.
Pax: The History of a Catholic Peace Society in Britain 1936-1971, Flessati, Valerie , Bradford, p.535, (1991)
Detailed historical study of both Pax and the Catholic element in the British peace movement. Pax from the outset opposed war under modern conditions as contrary to traditional just war teaching, a stance underlined by the development of nuclear weapons. Influenced Catholic thinking about modern war and the decision of the Second Vatican Council to recognize the right to conscientious objection and to call upon states to make provision for it.
Peers, Queers and Commons: The Struggle for Gay Law Reform from 1950 to the Present, Jeffrey-Poulter, Stephen , London, p.320, (1991)
Detailed account of post-war gay movement using contemporary newspaper reports, articles and letters.
People Power: The Building of a New European Home, Randle, Michael , Stroud, p.224, (1991)
Chapter 1 discusses the context of the revolutions, ch. 2 the build up of protest (including in Bulgaria) and the role of international pressures. Part II comprises interviews with key participants in 1989, both about the revolutions and future possibilities. Includes interviews on Romania and Slovenia.
Political Protest and Cultural Revolution: Nonviolent Direct Action in the 1970s and 1980s, Epstein, Barbara , Berkeley CA, p.327, (1991)
Covers environmental/peace/feminist protest in the USA, analysing key ideas and organising methods, as well as evolution of some major campaigns, for example against the Seabrook nuclear energy plant and the Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory.
Politics and the Ecology of Survival, Shiva, Vandana , London and Tokyo, p.365, (1991)
Analysis by expert on issues of ecology, development and the role of women in conflicts over natural resources in India; includes references to Appiko protests to save forests and satyagraha against mining.
Popular Culture in Chile: Resistance and Survival, Aman, Kenneth, and Parker Christian , Boulder CO, p.225, (1991)
Especially Isabel Donoso, ‘Human Rights and Popular Organizations’, pp. 189-200.
The Power and Promise of Community Unionism, Banks, Andy , Volume 1, Issue 18, p.18, (1991)
Discusses the ‘Justice for Janitors’ campaign in Los Angeles from 1986-1990 and success in reaching out to the immigrant community.
President Moi and the Decline of Democracy in Kenya, Murungi, Kiraitu , Volume 8, Issue 4, p.16, (1991)
The Pro-Democracy Protests in China: Reports from the Provinces, Unger, Jonathan , Armonk NY, p.239, (1991)
The Purple Shall Govern: A South Africa A to Z of Nonviolent Action, Smuts, Dene, and Westcott Shauna , Cape Town, p.165, (1991)
Examples of nonviolent action from the 1950s to the 1990s. Brief extracts illustrate tactics such as boycotts, courting arrest, funerals, graffiti, ostracism, prayer, resisting removal, voluntary exile and ‘wading-in’ (against segregated beaches).
Reservations are for Indians, Robertson, Heather , Toronto, p.303, (1991)
Account of life on four reservations, the impact of government and emergence of new more radical leaders. Includes material on a protest march and ‘drink-in’ in 1960s.
The Revenge of the Poor: The Anti-Poll Tax Campaign in Britain, Hoggett, Paul, and Burns Danny , Volume 11, Issue (Dec), p.16, (1991)
See also reply by [view:biblio_individual_item_for_inline_reference=notlisted=166947]
Revolutions of the Late Twentieth Century, Goldstone, Jack A., Gurr Ted Robert, and Moshiri Farrokh , Boulder CO, p.395, (1991)
Includes chapters by Moshiri on the evolving theory of revolution since Marx, including Tilly, Skocpcol and Goldstone. It also comprises Goldstone’s analytical framework for understanding revolutions, case studies of a range of violent and unarmed movements (chapters on Iran, Poland, the Philippines and the Palestinian Occupied Territories are referenced under appropriate sections later), and a concluding chapter ‘Comparison and Policy Implications’ by Gurr and Goldstone that incorporates reflections on the role of violence and nonviolence.
Social Defence Against Coups: The Case of Fiji, Griffen, Vanessa , London, p.9, (1991)
The Struggle for Democracy in Chile, 1982-1990, Drake, Paul, and Jaksic Ivan , Lincoln, NE, p.321, (1991)
Student Protests in Twentieth Century China, Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N. , Stanford CA, (1991)
Taiwan: China’s Last Frontier, Long, Simon , Basingstoke, p.264, (1991)
After sketching in Taiwan’s earlier history and the evolution of the KMT, chapter 3 describes Taiwan’s political development up to 1986, including a brief summary of the birth of opposition (pp. 66-72). Chapter 8 looks at political reform in 1986-89, the founding of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party and the rise in protest.
Tales of Nationalism: Catalonia, 1939-1979, Johnston, Hank , New Jersery, p.261, (1991)
Much-cited in the social movement literature on ‘framing’, Johnston analyses the contribution of resistant sub-cultures under Francoism to the eventual resurgence of Catalan opposition.
The Vietnam Wars, Wintle, Justin , London, p.202, (1991)
A brief history and analysis of the wars in Vietnam from the 1945 declaration of independence to the US withdrawal in 1973.
The Welsh Extremist, Thomas, Ned , Talybont, p.144, (1991)
Chronicles the Welsh cultural and national revival in the 20th century, including the nonviolent direct action campaign of the 1970s. Chapters on several of the leading figures in the movement. Critical assessment of the response of English socialists to the movement.
Witness for Peace: A Story of Resistance, Griffin-Nolan, Ed , Westminster, p.237, (1991)
Account of border and conflict monitoring in Nicaragua in 1980s (in attempt to restrain the US-backed Contras and gather evidence on impact of foreign policy), and also of accompaniment of Guatemalan refugees returning home in 1989. (Extract in [view:biblio_individual_item_for_inline_reference=attachment=6762], pp. 279-304 – see 209 below). The approach adopted in Nicaragua was extended to other parts of Central America and to Colombia in the 1990s. See also: Witness for Peace, Ten Years of Accompaniment, Washington DC, Witness for Peace, 1994.
XIVth Dalai Lama: Peace is more than the absence of war, , In: Waging Peace Series, Booklet 28, 09/1991, Santa Barbara, CA, p.1-9, (1991)
When receiving of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 1991 Distinguished Peace Leadership Award, the Dalai Lama advocated total nuclear disarmament as a pre-requisite for the goals of demilitarization and the ending of all national forms of military establishment.
1990
Against the Grain, , London, (1990)
In-depth analysis of the campaigns fought by Southall Black Sisters and the issues that they faced in the first ten years of our existence.

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