Violence, Nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement.
Wendy Pearlman demonstrates that the use of violent or nonviolent protest derives from a national movement's organizational structure.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2011.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Violence, Nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement; Title; Copyright; To my parents; Contents; Preface; Acronyms; 1 The Organizational Mediation Theory of Protest; LIMITS OF CONVENTIONAL EXPLANATIONS; COHESION AND FRAGMENTATION; ARGUMENT; 1. Cohesion Increases the Possibility of Nonviolent Protest; 2. Fragmentation Increases the Likelihood of Violent Protest; Fragmentation Generates Motivations for the Use of Force Apart from Collective Goals; Fragmentation Weakens Constraints on Escalation.
- Fragmentation Divides a Movement into Smaller Subgroups That Are Well Situated to Sustain Radical AgendasFragmentation Impedes Attempts to End Hostilities; Fragmentation Invites Outside Interference, Which Can Encourage More Fragmentation and Violence; Fragmentation Motivates Violence with the Aim of Surmounting Fragmentation Itself; SOURCES AND MANAGEMENT OF FRAGMENTATION; METHODS AND IMPLICATIONS; 2 National Struggle under the British Mandate, 1918-1948; FROM OTTOMAN TO BRITISH RULE; RISING TENSION; THE ARAB REBELLION; The General Strike; The Armed Revolt; FROM FRAGMENTATION TO CATASTROPHE.
- CONCLUSION3 Roots and Rise of the Palestine Liberation Organization, 1949-1987; AFTER DISASTER; NATIONALIST REVIVAL; AN ORGANIZATIONAL BREAKTHROUGH AND ITS LIMITS; FRAGMENTATION AND VIOLENCE; Fragmentation and the Jordan War; International Violence; Impeding Diplomacy; Entanglement; EXPULSION AND ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE; CONCLUSION; 4 Occupation and the First Intifada, 1967-1993; UNDER OCCUPATION; A NEW KIND OF REVOLT; Foundations of Cohesion; EXPLAINING PROTEST; Nonuse of Arms; Mass Participation; Sustaining Protest; Opposition Contained; From Protest to Diplomacy.
- REPRESSION, FRAGMENTATION, AND VIOLENCECONCLUSION; 5 The Oslo Peace Process, 1993-2000; HOLDING TOGETHER; Collective Purpose; Leadership and Institutions; CROSS-STRATEGIES; Negotiations; Opposition Violence; Controlled Rebellion; THE END OF THE OSLO PROCESS; CONCLUSION; 6 The Second Intifada, 2000; DIMENSIONS OF FRAGMENTATION; Leadership and Institutions; Collective Purpose; EXPLAINING VIOLENCE; Militarization; Inhibiting Nonviolent Mobilization; Interfactional Competition; Intrafactional Competition; Collapsing Authority; Foiled Ceasefires; External Involvement; THE WANING OF THE INTIFADA.
- CONCLUSION7 Comparisons: South Africa and Northern Ireland; SOUTH AFRICA; NORTHERN IRELAND; COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS; CONCLUSION; 8 Conclusion; IMPLICATIONS; NEW QUESTIONS; Repression and Dissent; Conflict Resolution; Institutions and Order; Cohesion and Social Structure; Democratization and Centralization; LOOKING AHEAD; Notes; Chapter 1. The Organizational Mediation Theory of Protest; Chapter 2. National Struggle under the British Mandate, 1918-1948; Chapter 3. Roots and Rise of the Palestine Liberation Organization, 1949-1987; Chapter 4. Occupation and the First Intifada, 1967-1993.
- Chapter 5. The Oslo Peace Process, 1993-2000.