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정치철학/민주주의(democracy)

198가지 비폭력 시위, 시민 불복종 방법 - 진 샤프

by 원시 2025. 3. 10.

 

 

198가지 비폭력 시위, 시민 불복종 방법 - 진 샤프 

 

 

Civil disobedience of "illegitimate" laws Action By Government Personnel 142.

 

Dual sovereignty and parallel government

 

The list was originally published in Gene Sharp,

 

The Methods of Nonviolent Action, Boston: Porter Sargent, 1973.

 

 

The Methods Of Nonviolent Protest And Persuasion

 

Formal Statements

 

1. Public speeches

 

2. Letters of opposition or support

 

3. Declarations by organizations and institutions

 

4. Signed public declarations

 

5. Declarations of indictment and intention

 

6. Group or mass petitions Communications With a Wider Audience

 

7. Slogans, caricatures, and symbols

 

8. Banners, posters, and displayed communications

 

9. Leaflets, pamphlets, and books

 

10. Newspapers and journals

 

11. Records, radio, and television

 

12. Skywriting and earthwriting Group Representations

 

13. Deputations

 

14. Mock awards

 

15. Group lobbying

 

16. Picketing

 

17. Mock elections Symbolic Public Acts

 

18. Displays of flags and symbolic colours

 

19. Wearing of symbols

 

20. Prayer and worship

 

21. Delivering symbolic objects

 

22. Protest disrobings

 

23. Destruction of own property

 

24. Symbolic lights

 

25. Displays of portraits

 

26. Paint as protest

 

27. New signs and names

 

28. Symbolic sounds

 

29. Symbolic reclamations

 

30. Rude gestures Pressures On Individuals

 

31. "Haunting" officials

 

32. Taunting officials

 

33. Fraternization

 

34. Vigils Drama And Music

 

35. Humourous skits and pranks

 

36. Performances of plays and music

 

37. Singing Processions

 

38. Marches

 

39. Parades

 

40. Religious processions

 

41. Pilgrimages

 

42. Motorcades Honouring The Dead

 

43. Political mourning

 

44. Mock funerals

 

45. Demonstrative funerals

 

46. Homage at burial places Public Assemblies

 

47. Assemblies of protest or support

 

48. Protest meetings

 

49. Camouflaged meetings of protest

 

50. Teach-ins Withdrawal And Renunciation

 

51. Walk-outs

 

52. Silence

 

53. Renouncing honours

 

54. Turning one's back The Methods Of Social Noncooperation Ostracism Of Persons

 

55. Social boycott

 

56. Selective social boycott

 

57. Lysistratic nonaction

 

58. Excommunication

 

59. Interdict

 

Noncooperation With Social Events, Customs, And Institutions

 

60. Suspension of social and sports activities

 

61. Boycott of social affairs

 

62. Student strike

 

63. Social disobedience

 

64. Withdrawal from social institutions

 

Withdrawal From The Social System

 

65. Stay-at-home

 

66. Total personal noncooperation

 

67. "Flight" of workers

 

68. Sanctuary

 

69. Collective disappearance

 

70. Protest emigration (hijrat)

 

The Methods Of Economic Noncooperation: Economic Boycotts

 

Action By Consumers

 

71. Consumers' boycott

 

72. Nonconsumption of boycotted goods

 

73. Policy of austerity

 

74. Rent withholding

 

75. Refusal to rent

 

76. National consumers' boycott

 

77. International consumers' boycott

 

 

 

 

Action By Workers And Producers

 

78. Workers' boycott

 

79. Producers' boycott Action By Middlemen

 

80. Suppliers' and handlers' boycott

 

 

 

Action By Owners And Management

 

 

 

81. Traders' boycott

 

82. Refusal to let or sell property

 

83. Lockout

 

84. Refusal of industrial assistance

 

85. Merchants' "general strike" Action By Holders Of Financial Resources

 

86. Withdrawal of bank deposits

 

87. Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments

 

88. Refusal to pay debts or interest

 

89. Severance of funds and credit

 

90. Revenue refusal

 

91. Refusal of a government's money

 

 

 

 

Action By Governments

 

 

 

92. Domestic embargo

 

93. Blacklisting of traders

 

94. International sellers' embargo

 

95. International buyers' embargo

 

96. International trade embargo The Methods Of Economic Noncoooperation: The Strike Symbolic Strikes

 

97. Protest strike

 

98. Quickie walkout (lightning strike)

 

 

 

Agricultural Strikes

 

99. Peasant strike

 

100. Farm workers' strike Strikes By Special Groups

 

101. Refusal of impressed labour

 

102. Prisoners' strike

 

103. Craft strike

 

104. Professional strike Ordinary Industrial Strikes

 

105. Establishment strike

 

106. Industry strike

 

107. Sympathy strike Restricted Strikes

 

108. Detailed strike

 

109. Bumper strike

 

110. Slowdown strike

 

111. Working-to-rule strike

 

112. Reporting "sick" (sick-in)

 

113. Strike by resignation

 

114. Limited strike

 

115. Selective strike Multi-Industry Strikes

 

116. Generalised strike

 

117. General strike Combination Of Strikes And Economic Closures

 

118. Hartal

 

119. Economic shutdown The Methods Of Political Noncooperation Rejection Of Authority

 

120. Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance

 

121. Refusal of public support

 

122. Literature and speeches advocating resistance Citizens' Noncooperation With Government

 

123. Boycott of legislative bodies

 

124. Boycott of elections

 

125. Boycott of government employment and positions

 

126. Boycott of government departments, agencies, and other bodies

 

127. Withdrawal from governmental educational institutions

 

128. Boycott of government-supported institutions

 

129. Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents

 

130. Removal of own signs and placemarks

 

131. Refusal to accept appointed officials

 

132. Refusal to dissolve existing institutions

 

Citizens' Alternatives To Obedience

 

133. Reluctant and slow compliance

 

134. Nonobedience in absence of direct supervision

 

135. Popular nonobedience

 

136. Disguised disobedience

 

137. Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse

 

138. Sitdown

 

139. Noncooperation with conscription and deportation

 

140. Hiding, escape, and false identities

 

141. Civil disobedience of "illegitimate" laws

 

Action By Government Personnel

 

142. Selective refusal of assistance by government aides

 

143. Blocking of lines of command and information

 

144. Stalling and obstruction

 

145. General administrative non-cooperation

 

146. Judicial noncooperation

 

147. Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by enforcement agents

 

148. Mutiny

 

Domestic Governmental Action

 

149. Quasi-legal evasions and delays

 

150. Noncooperation by constituent governmental units International Governmental Action

 

151. Changes in diplomatic and other representation

 

152. Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events

 

153. Withholding of diplomatic recognition

 

154. Severance of diplomatic relations

 

155. Withdrawal from international organisations

 

156. Refusal of membership in international bodies

 

157. Expulsion from international organisations

 

The Methods Of Nonviolent Intervention Psychological Intervention

 

158. Self-exposure to the elements

 

159. The fast

 

a. Fast of moral pressure

 

b. Hunger strike

 

c. Satyagrahic fast

 

160. Reverse trial

 

161. Nonviolent harassment Physical Intervention

 

162. Sit-in

 

163. Stand-in

 

164. Ride-in

 

165. Wade-in

 

166. Mill-in

 

167. Pray-in

 

168. Nonviolent raids

 

169. Nonviolent air raids

 

170. Nonviolent invasion

 

171. Nonviolent interjection

 

172. Nonviolent obstruction

 

173. Nonviolent occupation Social Intervention

 

11 A. Establishing new social patterns

 

175. Overloading of facilities

 

176. Stall-in

 

177. Speak-in

 

178. Guerrilla theatre

 

179. Alternative social institutions

 

180. Alternative communication system

 

Economic Intervention

 

181. Reverse strike

 

182. Stay-in strike

 

183. Nonviolent land seizure

 

184. Defiance of blockades

 

185. Politically motivated counterfeiting

 

186. Preclusive purchasing

 

187. Seizure of assets

 

188. Dumping

 

189. Selective patronage

 

190. Alternative markets

 

191. Alternative transportation systems

 

192. Alternative economic institutions

 

Political Intervention

 

193. Overloading of administrative systems

 

194. Disclosing identities of secret agents

 

195. Seeking imprisonment

 

196. Civil disobedience of "neutral" laws

 

197. Work-on without collaboration

 

198. Dual sovereignty and parallel government

 

The list was originally published in Gene Sharp, The Methods of Nonviolent Action, Boston: Porter Sargent, 1973. Download at: aeinstein.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/198-Methods.pdf.

Word count: 987

 

Copyright Peace Magazine Apr-Jun 2018

 

 

 

참고.

 

https://www.aeinstein.org/198-methods-of-nonviolent-action

 

198 Methods of Nonviolent Action — AEI/ Empowering Humankind

Practitioners of nonviolent struggle have an entire arsenal of “nonviolent weapons” at their disposal. Listed below are 198 of them, classified into three broad categories: nonviolent protest and persuasion, noncooperation (social, economic and politic

www.aeinstein.org