198 Methods of Nonviolent Action

THE METHODS OF NONVIOLENT PROTEST AND PERSUASION

Formal Statements

Communications with a Wider Audience

Group Representations

Symbolic Public Acts

Pressures on Individuals

  • “Haunting” officials
  • Taunting officials
  • Fraternization
  • Vigils

Drama and Music

  • Humorous skits and pranks
  • Performances of plays and music
  • Singing

Processions

  • Marches
  • Parades
  • Religious processions
  • Pilgrimages
  • Motorcades

Honoring the Dead

Public Assemblies

  • Assemblies of protest or support
  • Protest meetings
  • Camouflaged meetings of protest
  • Teach-ins

Withdrawal and Renunciation

  • Walk-outs
  • Silence
  • Renouncing honors
  • Turning one’s back

THE METHODS OF SOCIAL NONCOOPERATION

Ostracism of Persons

  • Social boycott
  • Selective social boycott
  • Lysistratic nonaction
  • Excommunication
  • Interdict

Noncooperation with Social Events, Customs, and Institutions

  • Suspension of social and sports activities
  • Boycott of social affairs
  • Student strike
  • Social disobedience
  • Withdrawal from social institutions

Withdrawal from the Social System

  • Stay-at-home
  • Total personal noncooperation
  • “Flight” of workers
  • Sanctuary
  • Collective disappearance
  • Protest emigration (hijrat)

THE METHODS OF ECONOMIC NONCOOPERATION: (1) ECONOMIC BOYCOTTS

Actions by Consumers

  • Consumers’ boycott
  • Nonconsumption of boycotted goods
  • Policy of austerity
  • Rent withholding
  • Refusal to rent
  • National consumers’ boycott
  • International consumers’ boycott

Action by Workers and Producers

  • Workmen’s boycott
  • Producers’ boycott

Action by Middlemen

  • Suppliers’ and handlers’ boycott

Action by Owners and Management

  • Traders’ boycott
  • Refusal to let or sell property
  • Lockout
  • Refusal of industrial assistance
  • Merchants’ “general strike”

Action by Holders of Financial Resources

  • Withdrawal of bank deposits
  • Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments
  • Refusal to pay debts or interest
  • Severance of funds and credit
  • Revenue refusal
  • Refusal of a government’s money

Action by Governments

  • Domestic embargo
  • Blacklisting of traders
  • International sellers’ embargo
  • International buyers’ embargo
  • International trade embargo

THE METHODS OF ECONOMIC NONCOOPERATION: (2)THE STRIKE

Symbolic Strikes

  • Protest strike
  • Quickie walkout (lightning strike)

Agricultural Strikes

  • Peasant strike
  • Farm Workers’ strike

Strikes by Special Groups

  • Refusal of impressed labor
  • Prisoners’ strike
  • Craft strike
  • Professional strike

Ordinary Industrial Strikes

  • Establishment strike
  • Industry strike
  • Sympathetic strike

Restricted Strikes

  • Detailed strike
  • Bumper strike
  • Slowdown strike
  • Working-to-rule strike
  • Reporting “sick” (sick-in)
  • Strike by resignation
  • Limited strike
  • Selective strike

Multi-Industry Strikes

  • Generalized strike
  • General strike

Combination of Strikes and Economic Closures

  • Hartal
  • Economic shutdown

THE METHODS OF POLITICAL NONCOOPERATION

Rejection of Authority

  • Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance
  • Refusal of public support
  • Literature and speeches advocating resistance

Citizens’ Noncooperation with Government

  • Boycott of legislative bodies
  • Boycott of elections
  • Boycott of government employment and positions
  • Boycott of government depts., agencies, and other bodies
  • Withdrawal from government educational institutions
  • Boycott of government-supported organizations
  • Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents
  • Removal of own signs and placemarks
  • Refusal to accept appointed officials
  • Refusal to dissolve existing institutions

Citizens’ Alternatives to Obedience

  • Reluctant and slow compliance
  • Nonobedience in absence of direct supervision
  • Popular nonobedience
  • Disguised disobedience
  • Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse
  • Sitdown
  • Noncooperation with conscription and deportation
  • Hiding, escape, and false identities
  • Civil disobedience of “illegitimate” laws

Action by Government Personnel

  • Selective refusal of assistance by government aides
  • Blocking of lines of command and information
  • Stalling and obstruction
  • General administrative noncooperation
  • Judicial noncooperation
  • Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by enforcement agents
  • Mutiny

Domestic Governmental Action

  • Quasi-legal evasions and delays
  • Noncooperation by constituent governmental units

International Governmental Action

  • Changes in diplomatic and other representations
  • Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events
  • Withholding of diplomatic recognition
  • Severance of diplomatic relations
  • Withdrawal from international organizations
  • Refusal of membership in international bodies
  • Expulsion from international organizations

THE METHODS OF NONVIOLENT INTERVENTION

Psychological Intervention

  • Self-exposure to the elements
  • The fast: Fast of moral pressure
  • The fast: Hunger strike
  • The fast: Satyagrahic fast
  • Reverse trial
  • Nonviolent harassment

Physical Intervention

  • Sit-in
  • Stand-in
  • Ride-in
  • Wade-in
  • Mill-in
  • Pray-in
  • Nonviolent raids
  • Nonviolent air raids
  • Nonviolent invasion
  • Nonviolent interjection
  • Nonviolent obstruction
  • Nonviolent occupation

Social Intervention

  • Establishing new social patterns
  • Overloading of facilities
  • Stall-in
  • Speak-in
  • Guerrilla theater
  • Alternative social institutions
  • Alternative communication system

Economic Intervention

  • Reverse strike
  • Stay-in strike
  • Nonviolent land seizure
  • Defiance of blockades
  • Politically motivated counterfeiting
  • Preclusive purchasing
  • Seizure of assets
  • Dumping
  • Selective patronage
  • Alternative markets
  • Alternative transportation systems
  • Alternative economic institutions

Political Intervention

These methods were compiled by Dr. Gene Sharp and first published in his 1973 book, The Politics of Nonviolent Action, Vol. 2: The Methods of Nonviolent Action. (Boston: Porter Sargent Publishers, 1973). The book outlines each method and gives information about its historical use.

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