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Pontara, Giuliano, La Personalità Nonviolenta, Torino, Edizioni Gruppo Abele, 1996 , pp. 104

A discussion on the need to solidify a culture of nonviolence and peace education as the starting point for elaborating broader educational strategies and systems for peaceful coexistence.

Cheng, Edmund; Ngok, Ma, The Umbrella Movement: Civil Resistance and Contentious Space in Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2019 , pp. 336

The editors, two professors of government in Hong Kong, argue that although the Occupy Central movement did not achieve immediate specific results it did alter the nature of Hong Kong politics through the emergence of a new movement and repertoire of protest, and also changed Hong Kong's relations with China and its perceived identity internationally. Scholarly contributors from different disciplines assess the origins of the movement, discuss new participants and forms of protest, and the Hong Kong government's response. The book includes perspectives from China, Taiwan and Macau.

See also: Edmund W. Cheng, Wai-Yin Chan, Explaining Spontaneous Occupation: Antecedents, Contingencies and Spaces in the Umbrella Movement, 2017 , pp. 222-239

Boldrin, Juliana; de Moraes, Hermínio; Silva, Danilo, Participation in Brazilian feminist movements on social networks: a study on the campaign Meu Amigo Secreto (My Secret Santa), 27 2 2017 , pp. 219-234

Recently, many women’s movements in Brazil sought internet as means of expression and claim, and held campaigns of national and international impact through it, disseminating information using the hashtags #meuamigosecreto (#mysecretsanta) and #meuprimeiroassédio (#myfirstharassment) to denounce situations of various types of harassment they have experienced. The authors of this study aimed to identify which are the elements that influence the intention of women’s participation in online feminist movements by surveying 185 Brazilian women who took part in the #meuamigosecreto campaign. The survey provides relevant information for better understanding of feminist movements online, demonstrating that the participants believe that the campaigns strengthen the feminist movement, assist in raising awareness of men about their macho attitudes, can result in a decrease of cases of violence against women and can contribute to the debate on violence against women.

Pittock, Barrie, Climate Change: The Science, Impacts and Solutions, 2nd edition London, Routledge, , pp. 350 (pb)

Pittock, a well known Australian climate scientist, examines the scientific evidence for climate change, including new evidence in the 2007 Fourth IPCC Assessment Report of the rapid melting of arctic sea ice. He also covers the possibilities of investment in renewable technologies, and examines the role of the (in 2009) recently elected Australian government.

Ottaway, Marina; Ottaway, David, The New Arab Uprisings: Lessons from the Past, 27 1 2020 pp. smaller than 0

The authors look back to 2011 and the varied outcomes in four different contexts which shaped the possibility of and the reactions to mass protest. These are: the Maghreb (Tunisia and Morocco); Egypt; the Levant (Syria and Iraq) - states created out of  the Ottoman Empire and then dominated by the colonial powers Britain and France; and the Gulf Arab monarchies. They then discuss 'whither the second wave?' in relation to Sudan, Algeria, Labanon and Iraq and draw some provisional conclusions.

Tarrow, Sidney, The New Transnational Activism, Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press, 2005 , pp. 258

A survey by one of the major theorists of social movements, that includes some reference to the role of civil resistance.

Lama, Dalai, Freedom in Exile: The Autobiography of the Dalai Lama, London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1990 , pp. 308

Good, Kenneth, Towards Popular Participation in Botswana, 34 1 1996 , pp. 101-129

Roy, Denny, Taiwan: A Political History, Ithaca NT, Cornell University Press, 2003 , pp. 255

Chapter 6 examines the opposition’s struggle and breakthrough.

Gott, Richard, Hugo Chavez and his Bolivarian Revolution, London, Verso, 2005 , pp. 315

Analysis sympathetic to Chavez, includes a section on the popular uprising following the 2002 coup.

Coates, Ken, Work-ins, Sit-ins and Industrial Democracy, Nottingham, Spokesman Books, 1981 , pp. 175

An account of sit-ins or work-ins to prevent workplace closures in Britain in early 1970s, and an examination of subsequent experiments in workers’ control.

Carawan, Candie; Carawan, Guy, Sing for Freedom: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement through its Songs, 1992 Montgomery AL, NewSouth, 2008

Combines two earlier collections of songs and participant memoirs, We Shall Overcome (1963) and Freedom is a Constant Struggle (1968). Compiled by veterans of the Highlander Folk School (later Center), Tennessee – the adult education centre described as an ‘incubator’ for the Civil Rights movement.

Zielonka, Jan, Strengths and weaknesses of nonviolent action: The Polish case, 30 Spring 1986 , pp. 91-110

Includes interesting material on Solidarity’s underground period after December 1981.

, Presidential Election and Orange Revolution: Implications for Ukraine’s Transition, ed. Kurth, Helmut; Kempe, Iris, Kyiv, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 2005 , pp. 152

Glazebrook, Diana, Teaching Performance Art is like Sharpening the Blade of a Knife, 5 1 2004 , pp. 1-14

Describes the cultural project of musician Arnold Ap in the 10 years before he was killed by Indonesian troops, how at first it exploited the limited radio space granted by Indonesia and later became a more open challenge to Indonesian repression.

Alexander, Robert, The Tragedy of Chile, Westport CT, Greenwood Press, 1978 , pp. 509

El-Mahdi, Rabab, Orientalising the Egyptian uprising, Pambazuka News, 2011

suggesting a non-western interpretation of events.

Olivera, Oscar; Lewis, Tom, ¡Cochabamba! Water War in Bolivia, Cambridge MA, South End Press, 2004 , pp. 224

Gress, David, Peace and Survival: West Germany, the Peace Movement and European Security, Stanford CA, Hoover Institution Press, 1985 , pp. 266

Mamonova, Tatyana, Women and Russia: Feminist Writings from the Soviet Union, Boston MA, Beacon Press, 1984 , pp. 272

Mamonova and three others in the group were forced into exile by the KGB.

, Gathering Visions, Gathering Strength, ed. Bierley, John, Bradford and London, GVGS Publishing Group and Peace News, 1998 , pp. 39

Report of conference of that title bringing together nonviolent activists from different campaigns and different generations.

Sadiqi, Fatima; Ouguir, Aziza, Reflecting on feminism in Africa. A conversation from Morocco, 17 2 2018 , pp. 269-278

Interview with Fatima Sadiqi, professor of Linguistics and Gender Studies, on the discourse around feminism, Islam, gender equality, social justice and democracy in Morocco.

, Mexico: Submission to the Committee On the Elimination of Violence Against Women, Amnesty International, 2018 , pp. 13

This report sets out Amnesty International’s concerns about the Mexican state’s failure to comply with observations of the Committee (in the combined seventh and eighth periodic reports) on violence against women. Amnesty notes in particular the murder of women for gender-based motives, also known as “femicides”, the gender alert mechanism, disappearances of women, and the torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of women during detention, which is exacerbated in the context of a militarization of public security.

Gaetano, Arianne, Out to Work: Migration, Gender and the Changing Lives of Rural Women in Contemporary China, Honolulu, Hawaii, University of Hawaii Press, 2015 , pp. 232

The author’s research spans the period 1998 -2012 to chart the impact of the economic reforms on rural women drawn into urban areas, often employed in domestic service or in hotels and office cleaning. She notes how this migration of cheap and flexible labour from the countryside has underpinned high levels of urban consumption, and both helped to empower the women migrants and to perpetuate gendered forms of difference and inequality.

See also: Chang, Leslie T., Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China, New York, Penguin Random House, 2009, pp. 448 (pb).

Chang, who was a journalist for the Wall Street Journal inside China, revealed the lives of migrant women working on assembly lines in an industrial city, primarily by focusing on the experiences of two young women for three years.  Her book which won awards in the USA, threw light on a previously unknown area, and illustrated the very mixed impact of the economic reforms and migration from the countryside on women’s opportunities.

Woods, Lucy, Young Climate Heroes, Mar-Apr 2020 , , pp. 67-72

Survey of youth climate activism in schools and universities in Canada, focused on the climate impacts of excess consumption and fast fashion, symbolized by the November 2019 'Black Friday' shopping spree. Based on interviews with six young Canadians involved in a rang e of environmental activism. 

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