Training for Nonviolent Action

123 posts / 0 new
Last post
Training for Nonviolent Action

Training ourselves on tactical and strategic nonviolent action is essential to maximize possibilities and results. What does this kind of training entail?

Practitioners included:

  • Srdja Popovic and Giorgi Meladze from CANVAS
  • Sam La Rocca, Jason MacLeod, James Whelan, Holly Hammond, and Anthony Kelly from The Change Agency
  • Zsuzsanna Kacsó, Bianca Cseke and Corina Simon from PATRIR
  • Daniel Hunter, Joe Catania, and Philippe Duhamel from Training for Change
  • Linda Sartor from Nonviolent Peaceforce
  • Dola Nicholas Oluoch from Chemchemi Ya Ukweli-Active
  • Ouyporn Khuankaew from International Women's Partnership for Peace and Justice
  • Shaazka Beyerle from The International Center on Nonviolent Conflict
  • Hardy Merriman, an independent consultant in the field of strategic nonviolent conflict

Learn more about the experienced nonviolent action trainers who shared their ideas and resources during the dialogue.


 

Summary of Dialogue

Moving Nonviolent Action Theory to Practice

Enormous and exciting developments have taken place over recent decades to make this strategic theory available and accessible to people around the world, notably through education and mainstream acceptance of the theory.

Core concepts of successful nonviolent action are support, careful planning and strong leadership. It is essential to have a vision and strategic plan and to develop the tactics and campaigns necessary to achieve it. Most often, movements tend to happen through local grassroots organizations and unions, in response to circumstances in a place or because of the creativity of a group of people. It addition to educating people on their rights, nonviolent action also gives people an alternative way of expressing themselves.

Dealing with Repression

The effectiveness of tactics depends on the context in which the nonviolent struggle operates, and are not inherently effective or ineffective, low-risk or high-risk Even within an ongoing nonviolent struggle, a tactic can at some point be at risk. When teaching or training, it can be most effective in training is to have participants come to this insight themselves. Under conditions of repression, dilemma actions and simple mass actions can be effective. 

When choosing tactics to use, it is important to consider all possible tactics, as well as ‘dispersion’ and ‘concentration’. Different tactics are both necessary and useful at different times. One useful tactic activists have is to increase the cost of repression and reduce the effectiveness of the opponents’ repression. A group in Kenya identified the need to integrate the concept of self talk in nonviolent action training and to strengthen the capacity of organizations to traditional approaches of nonviolent action. And in Moldova, a "frozen conflict" brought forth some of the challenges that NGOs face in their relationship with the de facto authorities. To address these and other issues, Peace Brigade International (PBI) has provided for human rights defenders, trade union members and activists a manual to improve their understanding of security and protection.

However, participants need be aware that despite having a good plan and the right strategies and tactics, a nonviolent actions simply may not work out and that the best that can be done is to be prepared for probable risks and to train for the worst. Debriefing after an action has taken place is a tool in itself that allows participants a say and to realize their own power and effect.

Training tools and processes

One tool The Change Agency uses is critical-path analysis to get activists to think beyond what tactics they will employ and to consider how they connects with the vision, goals and objectives they are hoping to achieve. Another tool is power mapping for strategy building and mapping players/political actors and their position in relation to activists’ issues and their level of influence over campaign objectives. The New Tactics in Human Rights project uses a tool they call "Tactical Mapping" to help groups more clearly see the "terrain" in which they are operating, and additional areas they ca potentially impact.

Experimental methods in education that have been used include the water glasses exercise to show the difference between teach-centered learning and participant-centered learning, Education and Training for  Effective Environmental Advocacy: a chapter on educational theory is applicable to activist education in all movements, and The ‘spiral model’ by the Doris Marshall Institute which essentially follows an action learning cycle but with some guidelines for designing experiential process.  

A tool that proved effective and appropriate in Kenya, in the run up to elections when it was necessary to reach as many people as possible was the introduction of theatre into the process. A larger audience was reached in a short period of time and mobilization became very easy. Other examples of the use of theatre to engage, educate and move people to action are seen in Bangladesh (Action Theatre: Initiating Changes), in Senegal (Using Popular Theater to Break the Silence Around Violence Against Women) with the Philippine Education Theater Association and in Augusto Boal’s suite of The Theatre of the Oppressed (TO) which can be used in a meaningful way to explore and build a collective understanding on a range of themes. Another tool that has been used is the use of photographs to stimulate discussion, creativity and personal disclosure and strategic thinking.

Finally, CANVAS has designed four tools for knowledge transfer, acknowledging that the best and most efficient way to transfer knowledge is by using practical tools which enable participants to adopt new skill by DOING IT.

Training the Trainer: Experiences and Challenges

Challenges that trainers are face can include the opposition to joint “agreements” and the contradiction of so-called diversity. While it cannot be argued that diversity of tactics is a good thing, there are consequences to it such as a debate about he effectiveness of tactics, an unwillingness to put any parameters on public actions, the impossibility of truly nonviolent action (an action that is even 1% violent will not be "nonviolent") and the marginalization of nonviolence training, among others.  But a commitment to diversity or a variety of tactics can be especially helpful when groups are thinking about the surprise factor and keeping the opposition "off balance".

People need to need to feel that they have elected to be a part of the nonviolent action. Described as the 'Two hands of nonviolence', the combined impact of a nonviolent action, if designed well, creates an irresistible push and pull impact upon the opponent, stopping something while at the same time inviting people to work towards a solution. A great example of the challenges facing movements and campaigns including the need for a vision, measuring success, using a combination of pull and disrupt tactics, as well as know when to end a campaign is that of the Nestle Boycott.

Saul Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals provides some of the best advice on confrontational tactics, including do unto others before they have a chance to do unto you, if something you do is ineffective, stop doing it, be truthful and honest at all times, but know when to keep your mouth shut, plan to change the world, but be happy with changing a single opinion, and be controversial, but watch the legals. Most importantly, “Power is not only what you have, but what an opponent thinks you have”. What can let down trainers is failing to link the community's theory of change to the real issues that affect them. Flexibility and being able to listen are key to the process, as is creativity.

Resources Featured Within the Dialogue

General

Theory

Methods

Tools

Training

Exercises

Case Studies and Examples

Recommended Books, Films, and Games


MOVING NONVIOLENT ACTION THEORY TO PRACTICE

Theme: Moving nonviolent action
theory to practice

In this theme area, please share how you provide training
that puts the theory of nonviolent action into a practical, accessible and
empowering process.

For example:

  • What would you recommend as a
    core package of knowledge and skills on theory and application for
    nonviolent action? (e.g., understanding strategy, tactics, power
    relations, etc)
  • What is the importance of
    having a strategic plan/vision?
  • What is the role of nonviolence
    training in building powerful nonviolent movements?
  • Why should organizations and
    movements invest considerable time and resources on training for
    nonviolent action?
Moving nonviolent action theory to practice

Hi everyone,

I'd like to start off by highlighting the enormous and exciting developments over recent decades in not only nonviolent strategic theory but the plethora of training programs, tools, resources that have been produced to make this strategic theory available and accessible to people around the world.

The lessons and successes of recent large scale popular movements are being transmitted across movements and regions by case studies, books, documentaries, video games, manuals and a seemingly large number of trainer's running small to large scale training programs for activists throughout the world. It seems that the shifts in popular perceptions of the relative effectiveness of nonviolent or unarmed struggle is being matched by an increased willingness and capability to provide training and resources for movements. It seems to me more likely that movements today will be exposed to the concepts and potential of radical nonviolence in creating change and noticably easier for activists in the majority world to access tools, resources and information on nonviolent struggle than it was a few decades ago.

The study of strategic nonviolence is increasingly being integrated
in undergrad and graduate international relations and peace/security studies programs. Mainstream acceptance of the theory and concepts of 'people power' seems to be slowing expanding, (particulary after each example of brave and defiant nonviolent resistance is broadcast around the world), and the quality of our training resources, manuals and hopefully our skills is improving. As more activists are inspired by the success of struggles in other regions the more interest is generated in developing simmiliar and nonviolent strategies.

So whether all this is enough, how other people are seeing this and what else we can do to help support and build effective nonviolent movements for change are questions I'd like to explore further. But before we delve into the lessons, learnings and challenges of training for nonviolent action, I'd acknowledge the work of so many activists, trainers and movement builders on this dialogue and elsewhere who have contributed to these incredibly exciting developments.

Anthony Kelly

(Australia)

www.thechangeagency.org

moving nonviolent theory to practice

i think you are right that there has been a shift in the amount of resources available and commitment to learning in movements that draw deeply on nonviolence theory and the experince of movements around the world. What a prvilege! And i'd also like to acknowledge the work and commitment of activist educators and trainers in this dialgue and around the world. When I was first getting involved in social action, i know there were others at the time who were engaged in nonviolence education and training but i did not find it until much later. I wonder if this has to do with another partial success -- in that nonviolence theory and practice has broadened and grown out of previously confined territories and traditions? Or perhaps my positioning shadows the fact that we still aree very much a niche and inaccessible world for the majority of activists or people interested in active social change?

i also wonder, in relation to your thoughts on whether this is enough...
does all this education and training activity really add up to more strategic nonviolence and change making? One of the reasons i am involved in education and learning work is because i have been involved and observed passsionate activists working very hard without reflecting on theirs and others experience, without finding strategies that work, (without necessarilly thinking theory or strategy is important), without experiencing campaign wins, challenging power or movement building -- it makes me wonder, if we are part also of proliferating more theory, resources, learning that makes a difference or not? How do others measure our success in terms of moving nonviolent theory into pratice?

sam la rocca

Core Concepts

In response to the first question in this theme:

What would you recommend as a core package of knowledge and skills on theory and application for nonviolent action? (e.g., understanding strategy, tactics, power relations, etc)

In my opinion, when doing a workshop, the most important basic ideas to get across are:

1. To make change, nonviolent movements need people to support them. Therefore, it is beneficial to a movement to build an inclusive vision that attracts many people in society to support the movement. Movements are at their most powerful and are most transformative when they are able to achieve widespread participation by people in society.

2. Movements plan strategy from the top downwards: First they develop their vision (which is an articulation of what they are struggling for, not just what they are struggling against), then they develop their strategy and individual campaigns to achieve that vision, and then they develop tactics to implement their strategy.

3. Power is based on people’s obedience and consent, and therefore power can shift when people shift their obedience and consent patterns.

4. The targets (whether individuals, organizations, or institutions) that a movement wants to influence all depend on the continued obedience of people in order to function. Therefore, if the individual or leader of the organization or institution that the movement wants to influence does not want to listen to the movement, the movement can gain leverage by gaining the support of the people that the individual or leader of the organization or institution depend on in order to their maintain power.

These are the most fundamental ideas in nonviolent action that I think apply to virtually all struggles. These might constitute the “core package” of concepts that need to be delivered in a training.

Beyond those concepts, I think the rest of the material for each individual group should be customized according to what that group needs. Some groups may benefit from an intensive lesson on communications, others from a lesson about soliciting third party support, others from a lesson on negotiations or conflict resolution, and another from a lesson on capacity building actions, for example. There is significant variation between what a group struggling for minority rights may need, as opposed to a group struggle for self-determination. Or a group fighting for democracy, as opposed to a group fighting for labor rights or women’s rights. Or a group facing major repression versus a group facing far less repression. Therefore, trainers need to be flexible and be able to customize the content of what they teach to whatever best serves the audience that they are training.

You can find lesson plans that relate to a number of these areas in the curriculum (entitled: A Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle) that I co-authored with the Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS)

Movements develop strategy top downwards

I'm new to this web page - although I seem to know or know of quite a few of the contributors.  I'm really enjoying it.  

Anyway, this is response to Hardy Merriman's comment that "movements plan strategy top downwards".  

Hi Hardy -I'm not sure if I'm misunderstanding you, but that seems a highly provocative statement about planning strategy from the top downwards.  I'm not quite sure what you mean and what type of movement and what type of strategy you have in mind.   

 

Most movements tend to be somewhat diverse.  Initiative shifts - not because someone centrally is directing it but because of the circumstances in a particular place or the creativity of a particular group of people. 

 

If we take a movement such as the US civil rights movement, where was the top?  The NAACP, the SCLC, CORE, SNCC?  I think that Mary King's book Freedom Song has an excellent discussion of the distinct and conflicting leadership styles of SCLC (build up and deploy the charismatic figurehead ML King) and SNCC (local empowerment of grass-roots activists.)  So who are the topdown planners in this situation?  

 

If we take a movement like Solidarnosc in Poland: Solidarnosc was the body that the government had to negotiate with, but increasingly there were other autonomous social initiatives, often bringing in a younger generation and other social sectors.   In short, going in directions that the leadership of Solidarnosc could hardly imagine, let alone initiate.   I suppose Solidarnosc's grand strategy was what Michnik called "the self-limiting revolution" - demanding recognition of independent trade unions while being careful not to threaten Poland's allegiance to the Soviet bloc.  But the situation changedso much that those limits ceased to exist. 

 

Looking at the very protracted struggle against aprtheid in South Africa - you see distinct phases.  Something like the Freedom Charter was certainly conceived centrally, but the process of actually drawing up the vision of Freedom was a wonderful example of grass-roots, democratic mobilisation. 

At other times, the struggle was rather stagnating but gained new vigour from new leaders such as Steve Biko or with the Soweto uprising (which happened outside the purview of the ANC, although the ANC later recruited many Soweto activists).   Meanwhile outside South Africa, some of the most inspired actions happened almost despite the official ANC-aligned Anti-Aparthed Movement.  

I would argue that most of the strategic initiatives in the nonviolent struggle in Kosovo - from 1991-97/98 - did not come from the small circle around Ibrahim Rugova.  It was the teachers' union and parents who got the parallel school system going.   The health network was also outside Rugova's LDK.  And later, when the struggle was stagnating, it was students - acting in defiance of Rugova - who showed there were more possibilities for 'active nonviolence'.  

 

In those circumstances, you could say that the movement should have broadened its leadership, etc, and I'd agree.   But a social transformation is usually going to involve a horizontal spread, and protracted struggle will require strategic innovation from bringing in new social sectors, including new generations. 

 

For me, one goal of training is to deepen people's understanding of strategic possibilities -and especially people in the grass-roots.  This is not just so that they understand what movement leaders are saying, but to strengthen their own capacity for leadership in their own situations.

 

Howard Clark 

 

 

 

 

 

Movements develop strategy top downwards

Howard,

Thanks for your post. I agree with all of your general points, though I am not familiar with all of the particulars of the cases you refer to.

I think you misunderstood my statement, but that may be my fault because I could have stated my point more clearly.

In context, what I wrote was:

"Movements plan strategy from the top downwards: First they develop their vision (which is an articulation of what they are struggling for, not just what they are struggling against), then they develop their strategy and individual campaigns to achieve that vision, and then they develop tactics to implement their strategy."

This means that what I try to convey to activists is to plan their movement from the highest (top) conceptual level (their vision and overarching goals) down to the intermediate level of campaigns, and then to the detailed level of tactics.

This has nothing to do with a movement having a centralized or decentralized leadership structure, which I think you thought I was referring to. I am not advocating that organizations adopt a command and control or hierarchical style of leadership. I believe that is for the members of those organizations to decide for themselves. However, whether I’m speaking with grassroots activists organizing at a local level or with people from an organization that has thousands of members, I do believe that, as a matter of strategy, starting to plan from the vision and goals down to tactics is more effective than planning tactics first and then figuring out what the goals and vision will be later on.

Through history, I understand that of course a lot of organizations and movements do improvise and choose tactics sometimes before deciding a clear goal and vision, etc. However, planning the goals/vision first, the campaigns second, and the tactics third is one of the core concepts that I try to get across because I think doing so tends to make nonviolent action more effective.

Therefore, my first sentence should have read something along the lines of:

"I believe movements are more effective when they develop a vision first and then develop campaigns and tactics to achieve that vision."

strategy from top

thanks Hardy for the clarification ... 

I had a feeling that I was misunderstanding you! 

I agree with your goals - campaigns - tactics approach.  Perhaps it's even truer of organisations than it is of movements.  With movements there might be more exceptions - maybe somebody hits on a good tactic that bears repeating and gradually a strategy evolves.  This might apply especially to some of the infectious women's initiatives such as Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, Greenham Common, Women in Black ...  where the initiators really had no sense of their own potential.

However, any group that stays without a conscious strategy is likely to lose its way.

It's good to see the increasing repertoire of strategy tools developing, and I think the work you refer toshows a real advance over what existed even 10 years ago.  

Howard

 

 

Vision and Strategic Planning

In response to the second questions in this theme: What is the importance of having a strategic plan/vision?

There are many reasons for a movement to have a vision and strategic plan. First, let’s define what a vision and strategic plan is.

A vision is a picture of what the movement wants some part of society to look like when the struggle is complete. For example, “we are struggling for a society in which all people are treated equal, regardless of the color of their skin”. Or, “we are struggling for a society in which human rights are universally recognized, and each person’s vote is counted”. Or, “we are struggling for a society in which a person who works is paid enough and receives enough benefits that they can support their family”. A vision tells what a movement is struggling for (human rights, democracy, freedom, justice, accountable government, transparent government, a clean environment, etc.), not just what it is against (dictatorship, war, corruption, discrimination, oppression, racism, etc.). A vision is also designed to appeal to as many groups as possible so that the nonviolent movement can gain those groups’ support.

A strategic plan is a plan for how to realistically achieve that vision (or to achieve as much of that vision as is realistically possible). The strategic plan can be broken down into different parts. It consists of campaigns and tactics. A campaign is a plan for the conduct of a major phase of a nonviolent struggle. For example, a group that wants the right to unionize and better working conditions may have several campaigns as part of their strategic plan. One campaign may be aimed at influencing consumers. Another campaign may be based around organizing workers. A third campaign may based around building coalitions and appealing to external groups for support. All of those campaigns work together to support the group’s vision of a labor force that has the right to unionize and fair and safe working conditions.

Each of these campaigns requires certain tactics, which are actions that a movement takes to achieve particular objectives. For example, the consumer campaign may involve tactics such as consumer boycotts, writing letters to management, and divesting money from the corporation. The workers campaign may involve tactics such as striking, picketing, and establishing a strike fund for workers. And the coalition building campaign may involve tactics such as appearing at churches, meeting with other unions, and supporting new legislation.

There is a lot more to strategic planning (such as setting objectives, developing communications, targeting actions, etc.) and developing a vision than I have mentioned above. But based on the simple definitions and examples I’ve given above, here is my answer to why a vision and a strategic plan are so important.

1. First and foremost, what I see based on history is that movements that engage in strategic planning tend to be more effective than movements that rely on improvised or spontaneous nonviolent action.

2. Movements that strategize and develop a vision maximize the impact of their human resources, material resources, and time. Because they are organized around common goals and a common vision, they perform tactics and campaigns that all mutually reinforce each other. They concentrate their strengths on winning achievable objectives. And they are resilient when they are faced with opposition because they have done the analysis ahead of time for how they will handle opposition.

Moving theory to practice - importance of having a vision

I really appreciate your excellent examples that help to clearly illustrate the differences between vision, strategic plan, campaigns and tactics.

I want to emphasize your brief statement about having a vision of where the movement wants to go rather than focusing solely on what the movement is against. You stated, "A vision is also designed to appeal to as many groups as possible so
that the nonviolent movement can gain those groups’ support."

I like the way you put this and I think this a key statement that deserves more examination . It especially relates to your second point about why having a vision and strategic plan are so important.  As you state (partial quote): "2. Movements that strategize and develop a vision maximize the impact
of their human resources, material resources, and time. Because they
are organized around common goals and a common vision, they perform
tactics and campaigns that all mutually reinforce each other."

Having a clear vision that you can tell others makes it much easier to engage them, gain their support for that vision, and keep them involved in the different stages of the struggle. Some people will join a movement because you talk about the negatives - that's not a bad thing at all. But being able to enlist peoples' support for the vision, the world we want to create, can carry the movement beyond those stages when the negative aspects are shifting and when different interests are vying to fill the spaces left open but when the vision we are trying to create is still out of reach.  Removing the negative is only one part of the struggle - creating the positive and getting to our vision, is our real goal.

I'm interested to hear experiences from others on this.

Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

Moving Nonviolent Action theory into practice

Hi everyone,

glad to participate in discussion unveiling such an important issues, regrading forst one i would like to give some short comments.

  • What would you recommend as a core package of knowledge and skills on theory and application for nonviolent action? (e.g., understanding strategy, tactics, power relations, etc)
  • ...pretty complex question, which should be explained on four levels - principles, vision, strategy and tactics

     

    PRINCIPLES

    If you analyse dozen of succesfull nonviolent movements you may think that every single struggle is unique, and you would be right! Still people like dr Peter Ackerman has researched into these struggles searching for more or less universal PRINCIPLES of succes. After a years of discussions, seems that three principles for succes in ALL of the cases (from India in the beginning of century, through Movements i have had personal experiences with, Like Serbian OTPOR or Georgian Kmara, to Lebanon movement after Harriri`s assasination, which we may consider as the last public succes of nonviolent movement recently), seems that we may define three principles

    1. Unity (which may be breakdown as Unity of purpose, Unity of People and Unity within the organization)

    2. Planning (including defining Vision of tommrow, Grand strategy, Campaigns, Individual tactics, their clever selection and linking)

    3. Nonviolent discipline (train and maintain nonviolent discipline within movement helps build momentum and make opponents oppresion Backfire.

     

    You may observe (and Robert Helvey has written about it in his great book "NVS - Thinking about the fundamenttals" avaliable on this dialogue, that this three principles together with simple rools dating from Sun Tzu "Art of War" creates the impression that principles of succes are simmilar, wether you examine the nonviolent struggle, or millitary struggle.

     You may find more about this issue in CANVAS Core curriculum, effective guide to nonviolent struggle" avaliable on this website

     

    Re: [New Tactics Dialogues: Training for Nonviolent Action] theo

    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>Hi all, </FONT></DIV>
    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>I am glad someone raised this issue about the
    experience of difficulty getting unity.&nbsp; I just worked for a group that
    wanted a two day session to get strategy and tactics to coordinate a movement -
    but the desire and capacity for unity was nonexistant.&nbsp; I will be working
    with them more and need to work on creating unity.&nbsp; Some of it is
    interpersonal conflict, the rest of it is - 'I am happy in my camp - stuff- with
    a lack of faith in coordinating effort.&nbsp; I think the Bringing Down A
    Dictator DVD highlights the need to work on becoming more unified - but more is
    needed.&nbsp; In Australia we have to build unity around a culture of
    individualism.&nbsp; That is not the case in Papua.&nbsp; In Aceh, which I
    studied in some depth, unity was built by having an armed guerilla movement that
    succesfuly reframed the conflict in a way that made sense to everybody.&nbsp;
    People then had different positions and&nbsp; there were tensions between
    groups, but the overall goals were incredibly similar.&nbsp; Starhwawk has moved
    on to a position of unity in diversity with huge extremes between groups in one
    campaign.&nbsp; I think we still need to develop ways of working with groups and
    tools that allow for diversity within a set of&nbsp;common goals as a way of
    allowing for this difference.</FONT></DIV>
    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>Louise</FONT></DIV>
    <BLOCKQUOTE
    style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
    <DIV
    style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black"><B>From:</B>
    <A title=newtactics@cvt.org href="mailto:newtactics@cvt.org">New Tactics</A>
    </DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A title=louise_home@internode.on.net
    href="mailto:louise_home@internode.on.net">Louise cooktonkin</A> </DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Thursday, May 29, 2008 7:58
    PM</DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> [New Tactics Dialogues: Training
    for Nonviolent Action] theory into practice -- principles and success</DIV>
    <DIV><BR></DIV>
    <DIV id=center>
    <DIV id=main>A New Tactics Community member wrote:
    <P>hey srdja, thanks for your post. </P>
    <P>i am intersted in these principles, and in particular some of how we move
    them from theory to practice. i think there is a lot of power in 'unity of
    purpose' but my experience working with movements in australia (privileged)
    and west papua (not so privileged) is that unity is difficult to create. in
    west papua, it is easy for people to agree that thy want merdeka but not
    always that easy to break that down into clear objectives -- do you know what
    i mean? in australia, people have so many different ideas about what they want
    to change and how (say in the climate change movement), and i agree that this
    lack of unity of purpose inhibits the movement success. What kind of unity do
    we need? what level does it operate -- is it enough to say we want Milosovich
    out of Serbia and how you work towards it or what you want afterwards matters
    less? Do you have ideas or experiences, or tools that you have seen work with
    the challenge of diversity and create unity? What are the ways unity is
    created? </P>=====
    <HR>

    <P>You are receiving this email from a New Tactics dialogue. You can reply to
    this message to participate via email. By replying:<BR>&nbsp; - Your message
    will appear on the New Tactics website, <BR>&nbsp; - Your message will be
    emailed to other members subscribed to this dialogue.</P>
    <P>To stop receiving emails from this dialogue:<BR>&nbsp; - log in and visit
    http://www.newtactics.org/node/. &nbsp; - Click on "Stop my email
    participation."</P></DIV></DIV>
    <P>
    <HR>

    <P></P>No virus found in this incoming message.<BR>Checked by AVG.
    <BR>Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 269.24.2/1471 - Release Date:
    28/05/2008 5:33 PM<BR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    Building Unity

    Hi Louise and Change Agency folks,

    My sense is that people unite around a movement when:

    1. The movement represents their aspirations
    2. They feel there is a place for them in the movement
    3. They think the movement has a chance to succeed


    Therefore, in my opinion, three major factors that contribute to unity are:

    1. developing an inclusive vision
    2. communicating the inclusive vision clearly to different groups
    3. building a record of success

    These might sounds obvious, but I’ll elaborate a bit on what I mean by each of them.

    1. Developing an Inclusive Vision

    When teaching at workshops, my friends at CANVAS or I will do an exercise with the workshop participants called “The Vision of Tomorrow”. (Note: it is outlined in the first lesson of the curriculum I co-authored with CANVAS, which you can download here: http://www.canvasopedia.org/files/various/Core_Curriculum-Students_Book.pdf)

    The Vision of Tomorrow exercise is usually the first activity we do with workshop participants. It’s a very simple exercise in which the participants list different groups in society (including groups that support the nonviolent movement, neutral groups, and groups that oppose the movement and/or support the movement’s opponent). So for example, the workshop participants may list groups such as:

    Police; students; business people; government bureaucrats; laborers; farmers; members of a particular religious community; members of minority communities, etc.

    Once they’ve listed different groups in their society, one workshop participant is then assigned to role play a representative from each different group (so, for example, if the participants list ten groups, then ten participants [one for each group] will be assigned to role play a representative for each of the ten different groups) and then the rest of the participants interview each role player, one by one, and ask them questions such as:

    • What is your vision for the future of society? What would you like to see change?
    • What kind of society would you like your children to grow up in?
    • What is most important to you in the areas of: the economy, elections, the role of police or army in society, human rights, etc.
    • Are you happy in your current profession? What would you change? Do you get paid enough? Is your boss fair and honest with you?
    • What makes you happy? What makes you worried or unhappy?
    • Etc.


    What’s amazing is that when workshop participants role play members of the different groups and answer these questions, many realize that a) they can teach themselves a lot when they shift their perspective and b) some realize that they’ve never thought systematically about what people from different groups in society feel.

    Once the workshop participants listen to people from other groups in society and discover what their interests and values are, they can discover common interests and shared values and build those into an inclusive, unifying vision for the nonviolent movement.

    2. Communicating the Vision of Tomorrow Effectively with Different Groups

    Once a movement has a unifying vision, they have to learn how to communicate it to different groups in society.

    Therefore, another lesson from the Vision of Tomorrow exercise that we emphasize is for workshop participants to listen to how the role players from different groups expressed their aspirations. Perhaps students, laborers, and farmers all want human rights and a fair economy, but perhaps they all express this differently.

    For example, for the students, a fair economy may mean having an interesting job after graduation that offers them the possibility to advance their career; while for the farmer, it may mean having low-interest credit available to them and having access to local markets where they can sell their produce at a fair price; while for the laborer, it may mean the right to unionize and to make enough money to provide for their family. Likewise with human rights, the student may respond to the idea of human rights when it is expressed as the right to intellectual freedom and the right to question authority, while the laborer may respond to human rights when it is expressed as a guarantee that they won’t be arrested or beaten for demonstrating that they want an increase in pay or benefits.

    These are just hypothetical examples, but the point here is that I think movements sometimes get caught on expressing their vision in only one way, with one set of keywords (i.e. human rights, justice, democracy, etc.). However, those keywords often don’t touch the hearts of the audiences that movements need to reach. Therefore, movements need to express their vision in different ways to different audiences, using the words that have emotional value and resonance with each particular audience.

    3. Building a Record of Success

    Last, but not least, I think one of the strongest unifying forces is when people believe that a movement will be successful. As the saying goes: “nothing breeds success like success”. When different groups are not unified and none of them are achieving anything, it is easy for them to argue and bicker with each other. But, when one group, even a small group, starts to succeed at something, even a small thing, the other groups start to notice.  People like to join groups that are  successful.

    I think a lot of times, groups of activists or organizations put too much emphasis on achieving unity too early in the struggle. If you can achieve unity early, great, but if you can’t, going out and achieving a victory on some small objective can have a major impact in helping you build unity. In other words, sometimes unity doesn’t come at the beginning of a nonviolent struggle, but it can come later on once people see that one particular group or organization is competent, has achieved some victories, and is capable of achieving the inclusive vision of tomorrow that it has set for itself.

     

    Re: [New Tactics Dialogues: Training for Nonviolent Action] Buil

    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>Thanks for these resources on developing unity
    and vision with groups I will look those up.&nbsp; I havent contributed a lot on
    this discussion because each reference had me going away to download sections to
    read.&nbsp; Thanks for the links Anthony on protection as well and Sam for the
    deciding skills and tactics activity that I will also be able to use.&nbsp; The
    discussion has been great.</FONT></DIV>
    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
    <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>Louise</FONT></DIV>
    <BLOCKQUOTE
    style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
    <DIV
    style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black"><B>From:</B>
    <A title=newtactics@cvt.org href="mailto:newtactics@cvt.org">New Tactics</A>
    </DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A title=louise_home@internode.on.net
    href="mailto:louise_home@internode.on.net">Louise cooktonkin</A> </DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Saturday, May 31, 2008 10:15
    AM</DIV>
    <DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> [New Tactics Dialogues: Training
    for Nonviolent Action] Building Unity</DIV>
    <DIV><BR></DIV>
    <DIV id=center>
    <DIV id=main>A New Tactics Community member wrote:
    <P>Hi Louise and Change Agency folks,</P>
    <P>My sense is that people unite around a movement when: </P>
    <OL>
    <LI>The movement represents their aspirations
    <LI>They feel there is a place for them in the movement
    <LI>They think the movement has a chance to succeed </LI></OL>
    <P>Therefore, in my opinion, three major factors that contribute to unity are:
    </P>
    <OL>
    <LI>developing an inclusive vision
    <LI>communicating the inclusive vision clearly to different groups
    <LI>building a record of success </LI></OL>
    <P>These might sounds obvious, but I’ll elaborate a bit on what I mean by each
    of them. </P>
    <P><EM><STRONG>1. Developing an Inclusive Vision</STRONG></EM> </P>
    <P>When teaching at workshops, my friends at CANVAS or I will do an exercise
    with the workshop participants called “The Vision of Tomorrow”. (Note: it is
    outlined in the first lesson of the curriculum I co-authored with CANVAS,
    which you can download here:<A
    href="http://www.canvasopedia.org/files/various/Core_Curriculum-Students_Book....
    http://www.canvasopedia.org/files/various/Core_Curriculum-Students_Book....)</P>
    <P>The Vision of Tomorrow exercise is usually the first activity we do with
    workshop participants. It’s a very simple exercise in which the participants
    list different groups in society (including groups that support the nonviolent
    movement, neutral groups, and groups that oppose the movement and/or support
    the movement’s opponent). So for example, the workshop participants may list
    groups such as:</P>
    <P>Police; students; business people; government bureaucrats; laborers;
    farmers; members of a particular religious community; members of minority
    communities, etc.</P>
    <P>Once they’ve listed different groups in their society, one workshop
    participant is then assigned to role play a representative from each different
    group (so, for example, if the participants list ten groups, then ten
    participants [one for each group] will be assigned to role play a
    representative for each of the ten different groups) and then the rest of the
    participants interview each role player, one by one, and ask them questions
    such as: </P>
    <UL>
    <LI>What is your vision for the future of society? What would you like to
    see change?
    <LI>What kind of society would you like your children to grow up in?
    <LI>What is most important to you in the areas of: the economy, elections,
    the role of police or army in society, human rights, etc.
    <LI>Are you happy in your current profession? What would you change? Do you
    get paid enough? Is your boss fair and honest with you?
    <LI>What makes you happy? What makes you worried or unhappy?
    <LI>Etc. </LI></UL>
    <P>What’s amazing is that when workshop participants role play members of the
    different groups and answer these questions, many realize that a) they can
    teach themselves a lot when they shift their perspective and b) some realize
    that they’ve never thought systematically about what people from different
    groups in society feel. </P>
    <P>Once the workshop participants listen to people from other groups in
    society and discover what their interests and values are, they can discover
    common interests and shared values and build those into an inclusive, unifying
    vision for the nonviolent movement. </P>
    <P><STRONG><EM>2. Communicating the Vision of Tomorrow Effectively with
    Different Groups</EM></STRONG> </P>
    <P>Once a movement has a unifying vision, they have to learn how to
    communicate it to different groups in society.</P>
    <P>Therefore, another lesson from the Vision of Tomorrow exercise that we
    emphasize is for workshop participants to listen to how the role players from
    different groups expressed their aspirations. Perhaps students, laborers, and
    farmers all want human rights and a fair economy, but perhaps they all express
    this differently. </P>
    <P>For example, for the students, a fair economy may mean having an
    interesting job after graduation that offers them the possibility to advance
    their career; while for the farmer, it may mean having low-interest credit
    available to them and having access to local markets where they can sell their
    produce at a fair price; while for the laborer, it may mean the right to
    unionize and to make enough money to provide for their family. Likewise with
    human rights, the student may respond to the idea of human rights when it is
    expressed as the right to intellectual freedom and the right to question
    authority, while the laborer may respond to human rights when it is expressed
    as a guarantee that they won’t be arrested or beaten for demonstrating that
    they want an increase in pay or benefits.</P>
    <P>These are just hypothetical examples, but the point here is that I think
    movements sometimes get caught on expressing their vision in only one way,
    with one set of keywords (i.e. human rights, justice, democracy, etc.).
    However, those keywords often don’t touch the hearts of the audiences that
    movements need to reach. Therefore, movements need to express their vision in
    different ways to different audiences, using the words that have emotional
    value and resonance with each particular audience. </P>
    <P><STRONG><EM>3. Building a Record of Success</EM></STRONG> </P>
    <P>Last, but not least, I think one of the strongest unifying forces is when
    people believe that a movement will be successful. As the saying goes:
    “nothing breeds success like success”. When different groups are not unified
    and none of them are achieving anything, it is easy for them to argue and
    bicker with each other. But, when one group, even a small group, starts to
    succeed at something, even a small thing, the other groups start to
    notice.&nbsp; People like to join groups that are&nbsp; successful. </P>
    <P>I think a lot of times, groups of activists or organizations put too much
    emphasis on achieving unity too early in the struggle. If you can achieve
    unity early, great, but if you can’t, going out and achieving a victory on
    some small objective can have a major impact in helping you build unity. In
    other words, sometimes unity doesn’t come at the beginning of a nonviolent
    struggle, but it can come later on once people see that one particular group
    or organization is competent, has achieved some victories, and is capable of
    achieving the inclusive vision of tomorrow that it has set for itself. </P>
    <P> </P>=====
    <HR>

    <P>You are receiving this email from a New Tactics dialogue. You can reply to
    this message to participate via email. By replying:<BR>&nbsp; - Your message
    will appear on the New Tactics website, <BR>&nbsp; - Your message will be
    emailed to other members subscribed to this dialogue.</P>
    <P>To stop receiving emails from this dialogue:<BR>&nbsp; - log in and visit
    http://www.newtactics.org/node/. &nbsp; - Click on "Stop my email
    participation."</P></DIV></DIV>
    <P>
    <HR>

    <P></P>No virus found in this incoming message.<BR>Checked by AVG.
    <BR>Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 269.24.4/1475 - Release Date:
    30/05/2008 2:53 PM<BR></BLOCKQUOTE>

    Unity is allways diffcult to create

    Thank you for your questions, in many struggles CANVAS has researched in, the Unity achieving was an big issue determining movement`s failure. Case studies from actual strugles like Zimbabwe or Tibet are showing that without Unity, common Vision of tommorow, and of course, unyfied strategy, uncoordinated series of activities will not contrubute the cause, and may even harm movement`s credibility.

     

    The Vision of tommorow as the first step in Nonviolent Struggle (Role Play Exercise tool avaliable in CANVAS Core Curicullum) as well as developing and constantly upgrading a movement`s group identity  (sometimes including symbols, coluors, gestures, fashion stlyles, music....) may be important steps in building the Unity, as well as continuous commincation towards members/supporters of the movement (See SETI Exercise, "Targeted Communications" same source as above, CANVAS Core Curicullum)

    What is the importance of having a strategic plan/vision

    Hello everybody,

    Strategic planing and envisioning lays down the basis of a solid, well prepared on-site engagement. Strategy represents basicaly the goals and mission that an individual and/or team of practitioners are trying to achieve in the course of their envolvement in a conflict/area/region. It clarifies goals that deployment/force/action/practitioner is working for and highlights the way/road towards effective implementation of the goals. Strategic principles proved guidance for operationalization of how we implement the startegy at the concrete action level.

    One of the tools that we use and share through our training programmes (specifically Designing Peacebuilding Programes) and can be considered a strategy for peacebuilding programes design is called the 5 steps process:

    • Step 1: NOW: Where are we now?
    • Step 2: FUTURE: Where do you want to go?
    • Step 3: Which path shall we choose?
    • Step 4: Which milestones will form the path?
    • Step 5: Keeping on the path?

    Each of the steps uses different tools for implementation like: Situation Assessment, Conflict Mapping & Analysis, SWOT, Stakeholder Assessment, Scenario Prognosys, Risk Management, Lessons Learned etc.

    As an open question to everybody: whould it be possible to share other models of strategy building for enhancing the way all of us, as theoreticians and practitioners in the fields of nonviolence and pecebuilding, are working systemically for a positive change?

    PATRIR team

    Bianca, Corina and Zsuzsa

     

     

    Alternative models of strategy building

    Thank you Bianca and the rest of the PATRIR team for inviting comments on various models of strategy building. I see one area where the devising of nonviolent campaigns is experiencing a major shift.

     

    We are all familiar with one way of doing strategy: Gandhi taking a full year to visit, consult and reflect before deciding on launching a big new offensive. Martin Luther King mulling over the relative merits of going to Selma or Chicago.

     

    One of the developments we are witnessing is the rise of collective means of strategizing. The emergence of strategy tools, such as tactical mapping, Spectrum of Allies, Creating a Tactical Timeline and others that allow strategy development in groups is really exciting. I have witnessed the wisdom of groups enough times to know it is one of our most precious and underused resources.

     

    Looking for collectives means of strategizing is not to deny, or undervalue in any way, the tremendous contributions that creative individual minds and seasoned organizers can and do bring to movements and struggles, however.

     

    I find the idea of a "leaderless movement" as appealing as the next person. I do see it as a goal, a North Star that I want to paddle towards. But just the same I think it would be delusion to believe it's rarely if ever an accomplished reality. The few "leaderless" organizations I have seen were just informally, but not less completely, controlled by a few individuals. It's not that I mind so much, it's just that acknowledged leadership is more honest.

     

    Leadership in the conduct of nonviolent struggles is a big interesting question that needs more discussion, but I digress...

     

    One thing for sure: shared, collective leadership is becoming increasingly possible, thanks to more and more strategy tools and campaign design exercises being created and disseminated around the world. And that totally turns me on!

    --

    Philippe Duhamel

    http://www.interTactica.org 

    Alternative models of strategy building

    Hi Philippe and Bianca,

    One tool for strategy planning that I think is really good is called The Strategic Estimate. It was first developed by Robert L. Helvey in his book On Strategic Nonviolent Conflict: Thinking about the Fundamentals. Helvey lists a whole series of questions that allows strategic planners to systematically gather and analyze information relevant to their movement's struggle. The structure that the strategic estimate provides is helpful for movements who are trying to organize all of the important information that is relevant to their strategy.

    I also like this tool because it emphasizes that a strategy is only good if it is based on good information. Therefore, getting good and accurate information is essential and is the first step and in the formation of any strategy.

    You can also find information about the strategic estimate in the curriculum that I co-authored with the Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS). It is available at:


    http://www.canvasopedia.org/files/various/Core_Curriculum-Students_Book.pdf

    Question about human rights education.

    Hello everyone! I am one of the interns for New Tactics in Human Rights for this summer and I have loved reading this dialogue so far, but I have a question for any of the practitioners or other participants:

    I am a college student and I have had a couple human rights classes and none of them addressed non-violent action and I was wondering if you think nonviolent action should be addressed in human rights classes and in what capacity? In my classes we discussed a lot of human rights abuses but not much about how to stop or prevent them, is this something human rights classes should focus more on?

    Thanks everyone, I appriciate it!

    -Alexa

    Question about human rights education.

    Hi Alexa,

    a great question and something that is very important to think through i think.

    There are definite tensions and differences between human rights advocacy and protection and nonviolent struggle. Human rights protection and advancement generally centres around the use of international and domestic human rights laws, mechanisms and architecture and aims to enforce the states responsibility to protect its citizens. Nonviolent action, on the other hand, is generally a 'non-institutional' form of struggle, which in the classic sense aims to undermine the power of the opponant to continue the injustice or abuse. These are very strategically diferent approaches although there is often lots of cross over in reality. Nonviolent campaigns will utilise and invoke human rights laws and mechanisms as part of their struggle and human rights campaigns will often utlise nonviolent action tactics and technigues in order to promote human rights goals. I guess we could also say that most, if not all, nonviolent campaigns would have a human right dimension, or could utlise human rights objectives if they chose to.

    Furthermore, most people would agree i think that the major advancement in human rights work over the 60 years or so have come about as the result of widespread popular mobilsations, grassroots advocacy campaigns and nonviolent actions rather than nation states or even the UN voluntarily moving to uphold them without pressure.

    Despite this the human rights sector tends to reject or steer clear of direct challenges to the legitamacy of governments and involvement in popular struggles or conflicts. The human rights strategy relies upon the mobilisation of political pressure upon states to enact or support HR laws or protections. Often this places HR NGO's in a place where non-partisanship or 'neutrality' needs to be paramount in order for the access and influence upon governments to be maintained.

    Activists challenging the state for what ever reason are often the targets of state repression so will often utlise international human rights NGO's to increase their protection. Sometimes there is tension, confusion and misconceptions between the HR NGO and the activists about impartiallity, goals of the action etc.

    In a nutshell, I think nonviolent action should definately be addressed in Human Rights Education accross the board - if mainly to address these tensions and improve the proetction impact of the human rights sector for nonviolent activists - but also as you say to explore the huge range of ways of stopping or preventing abuses occuring. I'm sure others will have lots to add on this and can expand. Thanks for the great question.

    Anthony Kelly

    www.thechangeagency.org

    Question about Human Rights Education

    Alexa and Anthony,

    This is a very important question and I want to add my support to your comments.

    Building bridges and collaborations with educational institutions - with academia (the professionals teaching courses) as well as with the students themselves would be a great way to infuse human rights education with how theory is operating in practice.

    I think this is another example of that illustrates the points being made in another "thread" of this dialogue. Anthony - I'd like to refer people to your comment Pull (build support and power) and distrupt

    Drawing on my personal experience as a social worker, a great deal of my professional  education and development was derived from examining case studies and practicing by role playing with those case scenarios. It was highly effective and has made me such an advocate for participatory methods of training.

    The tactical cases collected and available on the New Tactics website provide a wealth of resources for both activists on the ground as well as activists in training (students in educational insitutions - and not just for human rights programs) to develop a better understanding of basic rights, civil responsibility and participation, and certainly nonviolent action theory and practice.

    I'm interested to hear others chime in on this question. 

    Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

    In my honest opinion Alexa

    In my honest opinion Alexa I think nonviolence should be addressed in human rights classes for two reasons its one thing to let people know about human rights abuses and another to address them and the second reason is that its so unfair to lift people up and leave them hanging and the risk here would be BIG. Increasilingly people are becoming  more aware of their rights and are quick to point where things are not right but the way to go about correcting some of these abuses becomes a problem which in my view is like half the journey. There is an urgent need to also include NV classes for this journey to be complete.

    On that not allow me share the Kenyan story as far as this is concerned. In the ninetees there was so much that was going on in the name of struggle in Kenya as Kenyans fought to get a new constitution, achieve multy party status, expand democratic space among other struggles but each time they planned anything for example peaceful demos, somehow they all turned violent to the extent that people lost lives. They were fighting for their rights yes and I wouldn't blame them because this is the only way they new. They in the process ended up also abusing other people's rights e.g. the small scale traders by looting because they had to vent their anger somewhere. They were aware of their rights yes based on the many civic education sessions they had attended but there was also need to educate them on the alternative ways of expressing themselves and so NV came in handy with Chemchemi Ya Ukweli and like minded organisations.  

     

    Oluoch Dola

    Chemchemi Ya Ukweli

    P.O.BOX 14370 00800 Nairobi, Kenya

    Tel:254-20-4446970 or 254-20-2320346 or 254735244554

    Email:oluochdola@hotmail.com

    Human Rights and Nonviolent Action

    On the question of mainstream human rights courses in schools, and their relationship to nonviolent action theory and practice, I would also argue that the two should be taught together. They are inseparable.

     

    I agree with Anthony about the existence of real tensions between Human Rights institutions and movements, and ongoing efforts on the ground. It is somehow another reality we have to struggle with. Great allies can be found everywhere, though. So I would encourage you to ask the question: why don't you get tooled in the means of advancing those rights in tangible ways?

     

    Oluoch Dola's point is SO to point: it is really unfair to teach people about their rights, and give them nothing about how to actually exercise them and EXPAND their enjoyment around the world. It is almost like a setup for failure.

     

    I have tried to present some arguments about the solid link between human rights and nonviolent action. There would simply be no human rights to talk about if it weren't for the long tradition of women, people of colour and allies everywhere struggling together, unarmed, for decades, to achieve some measure of justice.

     

    Schools and other institutions too often hide or forget that great ideas and principles were not all born and grown in classrooms and office buildings. 

     

    But that's okay, we still love 'em... and won't give up!

     

     ;-)

    --

    Philippe Duhamel

    Intertactica — a liberation blog 

    DEALING WITH REPRESSION

    Theme: Dealing with repression

    It is important to acknowledge that the
    repression and the dangers associated with nonviolent action are real. In this
    theme area, please share the ways in which you provide training to prepare
    people for repression and other security concerns.

    What training methods and tools have you found effective in
    dealing with the following areas:

    • Overcoming fear.
    • Build capacity to make
      strategic selections of nonviolent action – from low risk, medium
      risk and high risk actions.
    • Intentional sabotage from
      outside the movement (e.g., government or paid forces)
    • Disunity regarding adhering to
      nonviolent action coming from within the movement.
    Build capacity to make strategic selections of nonviolent action

    I would like to initiate a discussion on this point because
    it’s fundamental to successful nonviolent campaigns and struggles in general, and
    it’s a difficult yet important aspect to be included in training. Strategic
    selection means creating or identifying a nonviolent action that:

    Ø
    flows from the campaign or struggle’s strategic
    objectives,

    Ø
    is something that the group has the capacity to
    organize and resources (human, material, financial, etc.) to carry out. For
    example, if a new group is attempting to launch a campaign, it probably has a
    few members, a limited number of people who will come take part in the action,
    and limited organizational and resource capacity. Thus, if such a group decides
    it wants to carry out a march to City Hall culminating in a rally, this might
    involve more than the group can handle at this early juncture.

    Ø
    takes into consideration risk for the movement
    and for those who will take the action.

    There is more on tactical selection in the CANVAS book: “A
    Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle.” Hardy Merriman also has some good
    ideas he may want to share.

    Tactics aren’t inherently effective or ineffective, or low
    risk versus medium versus high risk. It depends on the context in which the
    nonviolent struggle operates. For example, organizing citizens to turn off
    their lights every night at the same time for one minute may be very effective
    in one context (Turkey, 1997 http://www.newtactics.org/en/ACalltoEndCorruption),
    but not effective in different context where the majority of people don’t have
    a predictable supply of electricity or if many people don’t even have
    electricity. The lesson learned is not that people should turn off their lights
    at the same time, but that the campaign identified an easy, low-cost, low-risk
    action that virtually anyone could do.

    The same applies to risk. For example, during the Solidarity
    movement in Poland,
    in 1980 workers in the shipyards went on strike for the right to have free
    trade unions. The nonviolent, civic power they exerted on the regime pressured
    it to accommodate to their demands and they won significant achievements.
    However, in 1983 the Chilean National Workers Committee decided to launch a
    strike in the copper mines and a “people’s walk-out.” When the mines were
    surrounded by tanks, troops and military helicopters, Rodolfo Seguel, the
    Committee’s head realized “…there was going to be a bloodbath. So just four
    days before the strike was scheduled we changed it into a National Protest Day.”
    (Ackerman, Peter and Jack DuVall, “A Force More Powerful: A Century of
    Nonviolent Conflict, p. 285) So the same nonviolent tactic – worker’s strike –
    was relatively low risk and successful in one context and high-risk in another.
    Information about these cases can be found in the documentary series and
    companion book called “A Force More Powerful: A Century of Nonviolent Conflict.”
    They are available from the International
    Center on Nonviolent
    Conflict (www.nonviolent-conflict.org).

    Even within an ongoing nonviolent struggle, a tactic can be
    high risk at one point or geographical location and low-risk at another point
    in time or location. Srdja Popovic may tell us more about OTPOR’s strategic
    choice of tactics in this context. It’s interesting that in the early stages, OTPOR
    didn’t attempt mass demonstrations in the capital of Belgrade. But at the end of the struggle they
    did and these actions were successful.

    In terms of teaching this, it’s important to give real
    examples, but perhaps what can be most effective in training is to have
    participants come to this insight themselves rather than be told. One can do
    this through a guided discussion after viewing segments of “A Force More
    Powerful” or discussing historical cases. One can also help participants learn
    how to design nonviolent actions. There is a good group exercise in the CANVAS
    book: “A Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle.” One can also do a group
    exercise that has participants design a low-risk, nonviolent action. The groups
    can be asked to:

    Ø
    Identify what should be accomplished with the
    action.

    Ø
    Decide on the issue.

    Ø
    Decide if the action would hypothetically be small-scale
    with a limited number of committed activists or a larger, mass action involving
    regular citizens

    Ø
    Assess the degree of difficulty of maintaining
    nonviolent discipline. Will it be difficult for the people involved to maintain
    nonviolent discipline? If so, this needs to be factored into the choice of
    tactic.

    Ø
    Participants cannot pick protests,
    demonstrations, marches or rallies – in order to encourage them to think “out
    of the box” and learn that there are many more kinds of nonviolent actions
    beyond these “traditional” ones.

    Ø
    Each group must address these considerations to
    design a low-risk nonviolent action.

    Ø
    Give the groups an allotted amount of time to
    work on this, and then have each group present their work to everyone.

    One form of this exercise to understand and design “dilemma
    actions” can be found in the above-mentioned CANVAS book. Dilemma actions put
    the nonviolent movement in “win-win” situation and the opposing side in a
    “lose-lose” situation. For example, during the Indian independence movement, Gandhi’s
    Salt March to the ocean to make salt was a dilemma action for the British
    colonial occupiers. Gandhi identified an issue – the necessity of the human
    body for salt and the British practice of unfairly taxing salt while forbidding
    people to make their own salt from the ocean. In 1930, after marching hundreds
    of kilometers with thousands of supporters, Gandhi reached the shores and
    scooped up mud, a signal to the “salt resisters” to begin boiling sea water. This
    mass act of civil disobedience put the British in a dilemma. “If they arrested
    the salt lawbreakers, they would create martyrs for the national movement and
    confirm Gandhi’s claims about their oppressive intent. If they let the salt
    resisters alone, they might sow doubt that they had the will to enforce their
    own laws in the face of Indian resistance” (Ackerman, Peter and Jack DuVall, “A
    Force More Powerful: A Century of Nonviolent Conflict, p. 88) Another good
    presentation on dilemma actions was developed by Philippe Duhamel and maybe
    he’ll want to talk about it more detail (http://www.newtactics.org/en/TheDilemmaDemonstration).

    Two types of nonviolent actions can be effective under
    conditions of repression: the abovementioned dilemma actions, and simple, mass
    actions. An example of the latter can be found in the abovementioned Turkish
    Citizens Initiative for Constant Light (http://www.newtactics.org/en/ACalltoEndCorruption).

    criteria for choosing tactics

    hey again shaazka, thanks for this post.

    in some ways it begins to answer the question i raised in the push -pull threat about when and how to choose tactics. in the Change Agency, we have been using a fairly crude tool for getting people to think about choosing tactics. we have combined two exercises (well versions of them) from training for change http://www.trainingforchange.org > tactics to strategy http://www.trainingforchange.org/content/view/54/39/index.html and  revoew of activities (which i can't find on their site anymore).the basic idea is that we get people to brainstorm as many tactics as they can think of, choose an objective and then timeline the tactics -- they can choose which tactics they would use and when. then we get folks to reflect on that process to come up with the criteria for how they chose. generally people end up with a list much like the one you have above -- where people are calculating effectiveness of the tactics in terms of meeting their objective, the risks involved, whether it siuits the context and how much power they've built or whether the tactic build power (attracts numbers), or challenges/pressure the target, etc etc.

    i like th idea of case studies too, and getting folks to reflect on tactics that they have used in the past and measure them against their own criteria (similiar to the intention of teh review of tactics from what i can tell).

    i'd be interested to hear others idea on this too

    sam la rocca 

    Build capacity to make strategic selections of nonviolent action

    Hi shaazka and all,

    some further dynamics around strategic selection of tactics regarding risk and repression which i often mention in trainings are around 'concentration' or 'dispersion'.  Tactics that 'concentrate' people such as rallies or meetings may be more susceptable to repression or crackdown where 'dispersion' tactics, such as stay-at-home strikes, boycotts or the turning the lights off action that you mentioned -  are less likely to face a crackdown in the same way.  Tiananmen Square is an example of the choice to concentrate forces that Sharp highlighted as a strategic mistake. Movements can misjudge their power and choose 'concentration' tactics before their popular power base has been built.  

    The other dynamic worth mentioning around tactical choice in the face of repression is 'adaption'  - how in aparthied South Africa after marches were banned, the funeral possessions became huge and soon fullfilled the same strategic functions.  Creative tactical choices can often adapt to repressive circumstances. Here in Australia, unions facing secondary boycott laws that outlaw pickets have shifted to 'Community Assemblies' which have effectively widened their base of support in some struggles. 

    Your very right to highlight how the context largely determines whether an action is low-risk  or high-risk, which is why i believe it is so important i feel to include good political analysis and risk assessment skills and tools in trainings of this nature.  So that activists have more capacity and tools to judge the political climate as accurately as possible and select tactics from a solid assessment of risk. A lot of these tools have been developed or collected by  PBI (Peace Brigades International) and it is something that PBI and others concentrates a lot of energy in training human rights defenders (activists) in. Maybe something I or someone else will draw out  more in another post...

     Anthony Kelly

    www.thechangeagency.org

    Protection Manual for activists

     

    Further
    to previous posts I wanted to share a valuable resource for training activists
    in security and protection - this manual (below) is accompanied by its own training
    program but the material is adaptable to different contexts and I’ve found
    useful to include in nonviolence training.

    One
    word on training activists in security awareness and techniques is the very real danger
    of undermining the radical defiance, courage and openness that
    characterizes nonviolent campaigns. People can easily become security conscious to the point of being risk-averse. (which is may be prefferable in some contexts). PBI has an interesting model which highlights this dynamic called Political Space (see http://www.newtactics.org/en/SidebySide ) which identifies that the activists' perception of how much political 'space' they have to operate in can determine their level of risk taking.

    I think that any material that
    covers activist security awareness and approaches should be couched in the
    larger context of political ju-jitsu, increasing the costs of repression (which
    Hardy discusses below
    ) and the need for campaigns to respond to repression in ways that effectively
    build movement strength and resilience to that repression. Not many
    'security' type manuals and approaches cover this and tend to focus on the risk
    minimizing or management of threats. Still, I still think it is vital to
    include and teach if possible within movement trainings - particularly the
    analysis tools which can improve tactical choices.

    Protection
    Manual for Human Rights Defenders
    ,
    Researched and written By Enrique Eguren, Peace Brigades International,
    European Office (PBI BEO). Published By Front Line - The International
    Foundation for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders. The purpose of this
    manual is to provide human rights defenders, trade union members and activists
    with additional knowledge and some tools that may be useful for improving
    their understanding of security and protection.

    This
    manual is the result of a long term project by PBI on field protection for
    defenders. We have had the opportunity to learn from and share experiences and
    knowledge with hundreds of defenders in the field, as well as in workshops,
    meetings and discussions about security. Most of the manual’s contents have
    already been applied in practice, either in protection work or in training
    workshops with defenders. http://www.protectionline.org/article.php?id_article=186

    Also: A UK site has been established at http://www.activistsecurity.org/ which may be useful in that context but very
    security focused as discussed above.

    Anthony Kelly

    www.thechangeagency.org

    Re: [New Tactics Dialogues: Training for Nonviolent Action] Prot

    <div>hallo </div>
    <div>&nbsp;</div>
    <div>I&nbsp;have been following the discussion closely; Since Chemchemi ya ukweli has conducting training for youth leaders with udungu society in nairobi. During the training i carefully come up with suggestions that need in cooperation such as </div>

    <ol>
    <li>Intergrate concept of&nbsp;<strong>SELF TALK</strong>&nbsp;in Non-violent action training, reconciliation and transitional jusitce&nbsp;given the Africa situation of election violence, xenophobia among other emerging issues which imply relating to our postive inner feelings and attitudes that affect many of us and that we adopt it as strategy. aims to use prayer, motivational&nbsp;thinking and need to transform our negative thinking.</li>

    <li>strengthen capacity of organizations in kenya to traditional approaches of&nbsp;Non violent that have been key foundation for lifelong education that involve adult learning which help handle gaps strengthen movements. </li>

    <li>there are problems of broad band internet&nbsp;in kenya that require downloading&nbsp;interactive videos and films on Non violent actions. with the help of this discussion more organizations need to support the process of mobilising print materials to africa.</li>
    </ol>
    <div>I enjoy the process and support the more dialogue in future.</div>
    <div>&nbsp;</div>
    <div>Hawi&nbsp;Rapudo&nbsp;</div>
    <div>Chemchemi ya ukweli&nbsp;</div>
    <div>&nbsp;</div>
    <div></div>
    <div></div>

    Protection

    Hi Anthony

    Great to catch up with what you're doing these days. 

    Another resource on Protection is Liam Mahony's  Proactive Presence: Field strategies for civilian protection (Geneva: Henry Dunant Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, 2006).  They seem to distribute it gratis and it's online at www.hd.centre.org

    Incidentally I'm editing a book called Unarmed Resistance and Global Solidarity, which will have contributions from Brian Martin and Quique Eguren on protective accompaniment.   Publisher will be Pluto Press, due out March or April next year.

    Howard

    Re: Protection

    In response to Howard's post on Liam Mahoney's resource, I would also recommend that readers take a look at the New Tactics Featured Online Dialogue for which Liam was a Featured Resource Practitioner in January 2008 - http://www.newtactics.org/en/blog/new-tactics/unarmed-accompaniment
    The dialogue topic is Unarmed Accompaniment, and includes many resources on this particular tactic for civilian protection.
    Kristin Antin, New Tactics Online Community Builder

    Opening Space for Democracy

    Also, I'd love to point out another resource on the theory of political repression that I wrote: Opening Space for Democracy.  It's used by PBI and other organizations involved in nonviolent intervention work.   http://www.trainingforchange.org/content/view/111/33/index.html 

     

    Daniel Hunter, Training for Change

    Anthony's posting on protection manuals for activists

    Shaazka Beyerle, The International Center on Nonviolent Conflict

     Thanks for these valuable resources.

    Build capacity to make strategic selections of nonviolent action

    Shaazka Beyerle, The International Center on Nonviolent Conflict

     Anthony, your distinction between tactics of concentration and tactics of dispersion is really good and very helpful to risk. 

    Build capacity to make strategic selections of nonviolent action

    Thanks Shaazka,

    Hardy goes into it in more detail below  - which i didnt see until after i posted. 

    Anthony

    Build capacity to make strategic selections of nonviolent action

    I really like how you have framed these aspects of "concentration" or "dispersion" along with "adaptation" of tactics.

    This speaks well for how to evaluate "political space" at any given time - opening or closing  - depending upon the degree of repression being exerted. I think this can really help activists to reframe their situation. Being able to move into a "dispersion" tactical mode when repression is
    full on and then possibilities for moving into a "concentration" mode when the space is more open. It's a constant dance that never moves in a direct line to the goal.

    When I've worked with activists living in highly repression situations, one of the biggest obstacles to overcome is their feeling that there is no room to maneuver, the feeling that they are completely boxed in.  A benefit to being able to reframe tactics in this way is
    the psycological and emotional benefits that can help activists to
    overcome what can be overwhelming feelings of helplessness and fear
    when repression comes down hard. It can help to release activists from their own expectations that if they aren't out there visible in the streets then they aren't succeeded or accomplishing anything. This kind of reframing provides an opportunity to see that different tactics are both necessary and useful to be used at different times.

    Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

    Increasing the cost of repression

    I like the points that Shaazka made on the topic. Here are some other thoughts on how movements can think about the issue of repression.

    Costs of repression

    When facing a repressive opponent, an important question for nonviolent movements to consider is what costs the opponent pays when it uses repression.

    In particular:

    1. What material costs does the repression have for the opponent?

    2. What human resource costs does the repression have for the opponent?

    3. How much time does the opponent require to organize and carry out the repression?

    4. Does the repression reduce the opponent's legitimacy?

    These are four potential major costs that the opponent may pay for committing acts of repression.

    Increasing the costs of repression

    Once these four costs have been identified, a movement may want to ask itself the following questions:

    1. How can we (the nonviolent movement) make our opponent use more of its time and material and human resources when it engages in repression?

    2. How can we cause the opponent to lose the maximum amount of legitimacy when it engages in repression?

    In other words, how can we (the movement) raise the cost of repression for our opponent? If a movement is able to significantly increase the costs of repression for the opponent, the opponent’s repression will becomes ineffective.

    Tactical considerations: Tactics of Concentration and Dispersion

    In terms of increasing the time, material and human resource costs of repression, movements have many options. One simple consideration is choosing which tactics to use. Tactics that are public and that concentrate people in a small area (such as protests) usually are the easiest actions for an opponent to repress—they don't require much of the opponent’s time, human, or material resources.

    On the other hand, tactics that disperse people over a wide area and that involve small, low-risk, anonymous actions often require more time and material and human resources to repress. Examples of these kinds of dispersed tactics are a consumer boycott or writing symbols on walls, buildings, or on some other objects or places that people choose. These actions cost a lot of time, human, and material resources for the movement’s opponent to repress. Furthermore, even if the opponent does spend a lot of time and resources to try to stop these tactics, it is still very difficult for it to identify and arrest everyone who is engaging in low-risk, dispersed actions.

    Therefore, probably the simplest way for a movement to deal with repression is to make sure that it does not provide an easy target for the opponent to repress. Unless there is a strategic reason for allowing the opponent to repress a movement’s activists, it is often wise for a movement to avoid repression when possible and to make it difficult for its opponent to use repression. Tactics of dispersion help to do that.

    There is also a category of tactics called "dilemma actions" that are important to understand and that can help raise the cost of repression for the opponent as well. Although I won't go into detail about them here, you can learn more by downloading the curriculum I co-wrote (A Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle) and reading lesson 12.

    Legitimacy

    In some cases, using repression can also cost the opponent a lot of legitimacy. For example, in the above case of a consumer boycott, even if an opponent is able to identify all of the boycotters, it may look unreasonable if it arrests people who are simply choosing not to buy a certain product. Or, in the case of a concentrated action such as a protest, the opponent may pay a high price in legitimacy if it uses repression against a protest in which respected leaders and celebrities are present, or a protest in which the people who are protesting have a lot of sympathy from the general public and/or certain powerful groups in society.

    Increasing the legitimacy cost to the opponent usually requires that the movement figure out how to communicate about the repression. In some places, formal independent media may be able to communicate about the repression, but in other cases, digital media, photography or video or even simple word of mouth can be enough to spread the news.

    The next question is what should a movement communicate about the repression. This is a complex issue, but you can find some simple guidelines for communicating by downloading the document below:

    http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/pubs/bf/bfbasics.pdf

    This document, entitled “Backfire Basics”, gives the fundamental principles of what actions and communications movements can do to make repression backfire. It was developed by the Professor Brian Martin (University of Wollongong [Australia]). Martin has written extensively about the backfire process, and if people are interested, he has other information available about backfire on his website as well.

    http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/pubs/backfire.html

    The issue of how to avoid and reduce the impact of repression is complex and there are a lot of variables involved, but I hope the ideas above provide a helpful way to think about this issue.

    Backfire and Increasing the cost of repression

    Hi Hardy,

    great post and i'm glad you mentioned Brian Martin's Backfire model which is something that we are building into our trainings here and have even applied it in campaigns in a small scale.

    One thing that i like to highlight when talking about 'Dilemma Demonstrations' in trainings is that they are not just a tactical consideration but a strategic one as well. In a strategic sense the entire nonviolent movement is a 'dilemma situation' for the power holder for the reasons that you have listed above. The movement exposes the injustice, challenges the legitimacy of the opponant. and raises the costs of business as usual and creates a dillemma for the power holder about how to respond.

    Brian's Backfire model, if viewed in a strategic sense, can be utilised to explain the way movement can strategically 'build in' the political ju-jitsu effect into their campaign strategy. Brian's list of five methods repressors use to inhibit 'backfire' equate to the power holder - covering up, devaluing, reinterpreting, using official channels and intimidation, against the movement as a whole. Likewise, movements wanting to apply the Backfire model in a strategic sense would need to 1.expose the injustice, 2. continually validate or humanize the movement, 3. continually interpret the injustice in the face of official re-interpretations, 4. mobilise public concern (and avoid being channelled into legislative or bureaucratic processes), and resist co-option and intimidation/(repession). - ultimately to maximise the ju-sitsu effect.

    I havent used it in this way but may be useful to explore.

    Anthony Kelly

    www.thechangeagency.org

    From NGO Workers' Experiences in Transdniestria region

    Peace Action, Training and Research Institute of Romania (PATRIR), Cluj-Napoca

    Hi everybody,

    Among the first meetings with representatives of civil society I had in Tiraspol, Transdniestria region of Moldova - currently separated and self-proclaimed independent from Republic of Moldova, one of the so called "frozen conflicts", also brought forth some of the challenges that some NGOs face in their relationship with the de facto authorities.

    This is not uncommon there, but what I would like to share with you is some approaches of these people, many quite young, in sometimes difficult situations facing them.

    A woman NGO leader was sharing with us how during one of the "interviews" with the Informational services she was attempting to present the work of her NGO using the TRANSCEND diagram, showing them how the work of the NGO is not threatening and actually is aiming towards the transformation of the situation in the society beneficial on all sides. She found it very important to be able to meet with other NGOs and create a guide with useful tips from each NGOs' experiences on how to deal constructively and peacefully with the authorities who place obstacles in the work of NGOs.

    Currently, this kind of cooperation happens at some levels, through joint meetings in different NGOs.

    I mention that since 2006 PATRIR is working with local partners in the Moldova-Transdniestria conflict for civil society capacity building for conflict transformation through peaceful means and peace building. You have more info on the Cooperative Peace Project website.

    The PATRIR Team

     P.S. All of us (myself, Bianca and Zsuzsa)are working in projects in Moldova-Transdniestria conflict and would be open to share by email in the future if wanted.

    Preparing for the worst?

    Hello Everyone,

    I have another question:

    What about when things don't work? You have put together a great plan with all the right strategies and tactics, but it just does not work for whatever reason (I know this may not be a pleasant topic) How do you keep peoples interests in a nonviolent action that may have had some failures (as Im sure many do) in the beginning? Also, how do you incorporate that into training? How do you prepare those you are taining to deal with potential 'failures' (for lack of a better word) without getting disheartened?

     Thanks again, as an interested student, having this resource is great!

    -Alexa- New Tactics intern

    Preparing for the worst

     This is a good question and must agree that sometimes things don't just work out as expected. Nonviolence never gives up and this is where some of us go wrong that if one thing (strategy) fails then we give up. Consistency is an important factor in this and there is so much restrategising and creativity involved. If you look at what Gandhi did in India and partly in South Africa, you will realise that there was so much in terms of strategies changes at different levels. Partly constant evaluation of the process will help inform the future based on the challenges and the lessons that come with it.  

    This might not address all of your concerns but somehow it keeps some of us going among other things.

    Oluoch Dola

    Chemchemi Ya Ukweli

    P.O.BOX 14370 00800 Nairobi, Kenya

    Tel:254-20-4446970 or 254-20-2320346 or 254735244554

    Email:oluochdola@hotmail.com

    Preparing for the worst

     This is a good question and must agree that sometimes things don't just work out as expected. Nonviolence never gives up and this is where some of us go wrong that if one thing (strategy) fails then we give up. Consistency is an important factor in this and there is so much restrategising and creativity involved. If you look at what Gandhi did in India and partly in South Africa, you will realise that there was so much in terms of strategies changes at different levels. Partly constant evaluation of the process will help inform the future based on the challenges and the lessons that come with it.  In the build up to action otherwise known as the process of solidirisation here, people are to be encouraged to stay in the process and remain focused until they reach their final goal but also agree that how to do that could be an uphill task.

    This might not address all of your concerns but somehow it keeps some of us going among other things.

    Oluoch Dola

    Chemchemi Ya Ukweli

    P.O.BOX 14370 00800 Nairobi, Kenya

    Tel:254-20-4446970 or 254-20-2320346 or 254735244554

    Email:oluochdola@hotmail.com

    Yes, prepare for the worst
    It's funny you ask about this, because in drafting my next blog post (about the benefits of nonviolence training), I wrote this:
     
     Reduce fear. The most responsible training philosophy is based on "prepare for the worst, hope for the best". To counter fear, it helps greatly if we know what to expect (probable risks) and the extreme lengths to which the opponent could go (potential risks). People should be prepared for the worst case — yet realistic — scenario (this is not the time for unbriddled paranoia either). 
     
    For example, when training people for a low-risk civil disobedience action, even if chances seem remote that people would be charged under the Canadian Criminal Code, you have to tell them about the worst case scenario: They could end up being charged and convicted of a criminal offence. This would lead to a potential fine as high as a few hundred dollars, a possible jail sentence (not likely more than a couple of weeks), and a permanent criminal record.
     
    "If you aren't prepared to face a fine, a jail sentence and a criminal record, then don't do the action." That's training for the worst in one case.
     
    Sometimes, and this really depends on the type of action and environment, police dogs, tear gas, and what not are possibilities. Again, responsible training would cover the nasty bag of tricks, so people aren't surprised and defeated. 
     
    Just like you, I wouldn't be eager to join an action that I had no idea how bad could turn out. Seasoned nonviolent activists can usually gauge the extent of potential repression and problems, at least in North America.
     
    When you train for the worst, if the best happens — which often does in nonviolent action — the reality, while still harsh sometimes, is taken in strides...
    --

    Philippe Duhamel

    Intertactica — a liberation blog

     

    and training for the worst

    This is also something occupying my mind Oluoch, Phillippe and Alexa, and thanks for your thoughts.  I appreciate the comments about training people to prepare for the worst.

    I think that this question points to one of the important 'roles' of training -
    to prepare activists for the inevitable repression that they will face,
    whether that repression is being yelled at by counter demostrators,  told to move on by police, arrested,
    baton charged or worse.

    I've been slowly getting better and more confident at designing exercises and running roleplays which basically place participants under a fair degree of stress (but do so safely).  I've learnt a lot from other PBI (Peace Brigades International) trainers when we are preparing volunteers to work in conflict zones. During long roleplays at PBI trainings we might abduct trainees, blindfold and interegate them, have 'soldiers' threaten and harrass them, throw stones through windows when they are sleeping, all in the context of an excalating level of threat in a conflict zone - we use realistic looking plastic guns, real military uniforms and lots of props and 'extras'.  They are great learning experiences and all based on real PBI examples. 

    In other trainings for activists who are soon to enage in civil disobedience or intervention type actions I might slowly raise people's confidence with facing police responses -getting people used to linking arms or different types of physical blockading techniques,  threatening them, pushing people gently first then increasingly rougher, dragging people off, arresting them and holding them in a confined space (usually the venue toilets!) for a period of time.  I try and add police hats, rubber tubes for batons and other props to increase the realism if possible.  All this is in a training context that emphasizes participant safety and with ample debriefing and evaluation afterwards.  In fact the debriefing afterwards is where the learnings are drawn out. Importantly, putting people under stress in a training  allows people to experiment with their own boundaries and limits in a safe environment before experiencing things in the 'field'.  People are more able to prepare psychologically when their body is engaged real time in a roleplay. 

    As a trainer, the use of these almost theatrical techniques can be really challenging. It's sometimes hard to yell at participants and to physical  push and drag people. But I know that the stress and violence is nowhere near the level of what activist can experience at so many direct action these days and its so important that people have opportunities to rolplay these things first.  Sometimes groups have developed tactics during trainings which have worked perfectly when used at the actual action. 

     

    So getting back to Alexa's original question - In a strategic sense, movements need to anticipate and build resilience to repression - if they dont anticipate repression then activists can easily become shocked and dissappointed that they weren't immediately successful as you pointed out.  This can often be a leadership problem with movement leaders building up expectations and not encourageing a long term vision and strategy. 

    In Australia after the historically massive 2003 Valintines Day rallies against the war in Iraq , the dissappointment amoungst people that the war went ahead despite millions marching against it was pronounced. It hadnt worked/had failed etc were common.  The peace movement leadership (in Australia) did not help the movement recognise that sustained resistance and different forms of resistance was needed and that one march was not going to stop it. 

    And in the tactical sense, individual activists need to psychologically prepare themselves for the repression by practice in trainings, building support systems around themselves, learning from the stories of survival and resiliance from other activists, acting in solidarity with other activists etc etc. 

    All this goes to remind me how important nonviolence training is in all this...

    Anthony Kelly

    www.thechangeagency.org

    training - the importance of the debriefing component

    Anthony,

    Thank you for sharing this progressive training process that you have been using. I'm so glad that you pointed out the aspect of debriefing. You stated:

    "All this is in a training context that emphasizes participant safety
    and with ample debriefing and evaluation afterwards. In fact the
    debriefing afterwards is where the learnings are drawn out.
    Importantly, putting people under stress in a training allows people
    to experiment with their own boundaries and limits in a safe
    environment before experiencing things in the 'field'. People are more
    able to prepare psychologically when their body is engaged real time in
    a roleplay. "

    You give a great example of what training for nonviolent action is meant to do - give people an opportunity to learn, practice skills and integrate these skills so thoroughly that they can apply what has been learned to their real life experiences. Without the debriefing component, the opportunity to consciously begin integrating the lessons of theory with one's own personal life experiences and understanding to then put those lessons learned in practice would be much reduced. 

    Physiologically, people respond to stress in the same ways (heart and pulse rates increase, blood concentrates to protect our core, etc) but people psychologically react to stress and the different kinds of repression differently. Learning to know oneself in this way is incredibly valuable.

    A great video example of the kind of training you describe in your post is in the video series, "A Force More Powerful". In Episode One: the Nashville downown lunch counter sit-ins - the preparation training in the video shows how important that step was in preparing the students for the actual verbal and physical violence they faced when they carried out the action. 

    Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

    Handling repression: the power of debriefing

    It is good to see all the good thoughts here. One of the ways training has gotten written about again and again is as preparation -- choosing tactics ahead of time, preparing people to handle fear and expect repression, and assisting people to use repression as a chance to highlight an injustice and eventually backfire.

    Another value of training is teaching people how to debrief AFTER actions. I'll give an example.

    A group I was working with did what we called a "public filibuster." It's from the concept of the procedural filibuster -- where Senators or members of the meeting take the floor and keep speaking, refusing to yield the floor. We decided citizens could do it, too -- especially since it was a "public meeting" yet the public could not speak.

    It was good theater and people had a great time doing it. One member interrupted the meeting, and asked a couple of pointed questions. She was gaveled down. Another person stood up -- and was told to be quiet. Yet member of the group kept standing up -- several refusing to stop even when gaveled down. They called the meeting to a recess, hoping we would chill out.

    We did not. They threw out several of us. Others kept going. Eventually, after three recesses and kicking out a dozen of us, the entire meeting shut-down. We had sucessfully shut-down a high-profile meeting, made our point, made awesome press, and handled our fear successfully.

    So how did people feel? Terrible.

    "They never let us talk," was the immediate worry. And then a fear showed up around those who were pulled out of the building -- would more happen to them?

    So I gathered folks into a circle and we talked. We debriefed the event and, within just a few minutes of sharing, the mood shifted to elation. People identified our own power and realized they had successfully shut-down a meeting because it refused to open up to public input!

    (The next meeting, by the way, they announced a policy change which allowed public input. Our group was the first allowed to speak.)

    The takeaway for me was this: people need a chance to debrief after actions. People are so taught to feel powerless that even when exerting power, people can miss it. They can feel disempowered even in the midst of their own power, concentrating on their ineffectiveness rather than noticing where they are making change.

    In this case, which had a much lower level of repression than others I've worked with, I led a mini-training and facilitation right after the event. I set up a training session. But even without a formal debriefing session led by a facilitator, the act of debriefing is a SKILL that trainers would do well to teach to participants: action and reflection.

    Without reflection, even the smartest people can miss their own power. As movement strategist Bill Moyer used to say, "Doing nonviolence is easy. People do it all the time. But getting people to see that they did it and what it is -- that's hard."

    (Also, while we're on the topic, I'd like to offer another usefulness of training -- AS a component of action. A few months ago, a campaign that I have been working with got bad news: the mega-casino that they were trying to build in our Philadelphia neighborhoods announced that they were going to begin building in the ground. We believed this was premature, but they had the backing of the city and state officials. We announced our intention for a "practice site occupation" -- instead of doing a traditional site occupation, we did a training on the site. It developed our muscles in case we need to do a later, longer-term site occupation. AND it succesful enough in the media that it got the new Mayor to back-off and switch sides.

    Read the story at: http://www.trainingforchange.org/content/view/298/33/index.html)

    Daniel Hunter, Training for Change

    The power of debriefing

    Daniel,

    Thank you so much for sharing these really powerful stories about not only the full cycle of training (preparation to debriefing) but how training can itself be an action.

    It reminds me of Philippe Duhamel's experience of using training as a very effective tactic within the context of a larger action as well. In his tactical notebook, "The Dilemma Demonstration" he wrote:

    "A key component of the campaign to secure the release of the FTAA [Free Trade Agreement of the Americas] texts was training in nonviolent direct action. A one-day preparatory workshop was required of anyone wishing to take part in the Search and Seizure operation....

    A dilemma… even in training! At an organizing meeting in Ottawa, the coordinator of the Solidarity Network, one of our allies, proposed that instead of holding a demonstration on April 1, we could hold a People’s Parliament on the FTAA including civil disobedience training—but with a twist. She proposed we hold the event at a highly unusual place: the very home of Canadian democracy, our fine Parliament buildings.

    Using provisions allowing members of Parliament to personally book rooms at the House of Commons, she asked two sympathetic opposition MPs to book the rooms for us. Understandably, when Prime Minister Jean Chrétien found out about the anti-FTAA event
    and the civil disobedience training, he was not pleased. Yet, he could not stop it without projecting a dictatorial image; he therefore refrained.

    Media reports that morning said police had advised hospitals in the region to be ready for a high numbers of injuries on the day of the Search and Seizure operation, as they expected a riot. Needless to say, security personnel at the Parliament buildings were initially quite tense. Everyone coming to attend the People’s tribunal was frisked and questioned. After a few hours, however, tensions subsided. Guards were soon joking
    and looking with amusement as people were dragging each other along the corridors of Parliament, preparing for the action the next day.

    And so it was that 250 participants came to hear a spectrum of dissident voices on free trade and train for civil disobedience in the very committee rooms that should have been used to review the draft trade treaty. The national media, used to the venue but quite
    amazed at such a major departure from its more traditional use, were all over the story."

    The tactical notebook is a great read with wonderful tips and insights. Philippe also elaborated more on the use of the nonviolent raid in three of his interTactica blog posts: "One use of the nonviolent raid tactic"; "The Nonviolent Raid as Intervention Tactic" and "Tactical Transferability: The Nonviolent Raid as Case Study".

    I hope Philippe will also add more to the dialogue regarding his experiences in this area.

    Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

    TRAINING TOOLS AND PROCESSES

    Theme: Training tools and processes

    In this theme area, please share
    tools and processes that you have found to be powerful and especially useful
    when training for nonviolent action.

    For example, what tools have you found to be helpful for
    addressing key issues or knowledge areas?

    • Theory: Strategy building,
      tactical decision-making, understanding the nature of power and influence,
      etc.
    • Influencing attitudes and
      behaviors: Creating dilemmas for opponents, creating the right message for
      the right target, examining the role of privilege - color, class,
      ethnicity, etc.
    • Methodologies: Adult education
      and learning models, games, videos, etc.
    • Adaptations: What tools have
      found needed to be adapted differently for your context or audience?
    Theory: Strategy building, tactical decision-making, ...

    hard to know where to start on this theme, so i thought i would seaparate the different threads.

    there are a number of organisations contributing to this dialogue that do strategy in powerful ways and i am keen to hear more about how you approach this work. the Change Agency has made some attempts to compile a suite of resources that cover some of the key elements of strategy [http://www.thechangeagency.org/01_cms/details.asp?ID=4 and [http://www.thechangeagency.org/01_cms/details.asp?ID=57]. Of these I guess there are  a couple of tools that we know people find very useful.

    1. critical path analysis
    http://www.thechangeagency.org/_dbase_upl/critical_path.pdf
    this is a tool that we facilitate/share with groups to support a shift in thinking from tactics (what we do) to outcomes (what we want). Our experience is that many activists are much more comfortable focusing on what they will do (what tactic they will employ) without necessarilly thinking about how it connects with the vision, goals and objectives they are hoping to achieve. Critical path is one tool that asks us to articulate our vision and then break it down into a series of outcomes or changes that would be necesary for our vision to be realised. Do others have tools like this or others that help us think through what we want? that help us develop a theory of change?

    2. power mapping
    http://www.thechangeagency.org/_dbase_upl/tCA_power_mapping.pdf
    this is another tool that we have found useful in terms of strategy building and especially in terms of supprting our thinking about mapping players/political actors, their position in relation to our issue and their level of influence over our campaign objectives. In some movements, there is not a clear focus on the need to identify 'targets' (decision makers who can give you what you want), and we have found this to be one simple way for activists to start analysing political actors -- beyond 'the government', 'the community', 'the media', etc. Again i am interested to hear more about the tools others use when analysing power and players.

    sam la rocca 

    Tools for strategy building, tactical decision-making, ...

    I'm glad you took the leap and started us out on this theme in terms of the tools that you're using. 

    Sun Tzu, in the "Art of War" identified three necessary elements: 1) Know yourself; 2) Know your opponent; and 3) Know the terrain on which the battle will be fought.

    The New Tactics project uses a tool we call "Tactical Mapping" to help groups more clearly see the "terrain" in which they are operating.

    For the most part, when we talk about training for nonviolent action, we are talking about training people to shift the human relationships and the social institutions that make up our communities and societies. We can become so involved in our own movement that we can become very focused on just a few targets. We forget to see the vast number of relationships in our "terrain" and the potential areas we can impact. The tactical mapping tool provides an opportunity to re-open our eyes to see our situation again from a "bird's eye view". This gives us an opportunity to examine our strategy and tactics once again from a new vantage point. 

    It's especially  helpful to have many different kinds of tools like the onces you have described here. Each can assist us in different ways when we hit a block in our efforts. I'm not as familiar with the critical path analysis but I have used the power mapping tool and found it very helful.

    I look forward to hearing what others have found to be very useful in your trainings. 

    Nancy Pearson, New Tactics in Human Rights Program Manager

    Methodologies: Adult education and learning models, games, etc

    I am interested here in learning about how others 'educate/facilitate/teach/train" about experiential methodologies -- what activist education theories, models and experiential processes do you use to provoke thining about leanring methods?

    One that i have always found inspiring and well received (in terms of experience and learning) is Training for Change's "water glasses exercise" http://www.trainingforchange.org/content/view/177/39/index.html

    In terms of learning models, the Change Agency's approach is shaped by the work of one of our directors, James Whelan. James' PhD explores "Education and training for effective environmental advocacy" http://www.thechangeagency.org/_dbase_upl/JWhelan_PhD.pdf . And while he was focused on the environment movement in Australia, the chapter on education theory is applicable to activist education in all movements. One model i find useful in terms of methodology and design is The ‘spiral model’ by the Doris Marshall Institute (no longer active but previously based in Toronto) http://www.thechangeagency.org/01_cms/details.asp?ID=36 , which essentially follows an action learning cycle but with some guidelines for desgning experiential process:
    1. Start with the experience of participants
    2. Look for patterns
    3. Add new information and theory
    4. Practice skills, strategise and plan for action
    5. Apply in action
    and the spiral starts again.

    like i said, i am keen to hear about other models and methods, y'all use for creating and talking about experiential learning -- or other activist education approaches.

    sam la rocca

    Pages

    Topic locked