Direct Action and Democratic Politics

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Black Power
British History
British Politics
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civil disobedience theory
Civilized Society
Consensual Technocracy
Contemporary Society
Cricket Tour
democratic politics
direct action
Direct Action Movements
Direct Action Tactics
Direct Democracy
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Future Practice
Good Life
Government Economic Service
Hm Chief Inspector
mass media
Mr Jack Straw
National Committee
NCCL
Neighbourhood Council
Non-racial Sport
Non-violent Resistance
Nuclear Disarmament
Philosophy
political protest
political protest movements
Political Theory
political violence studies
Protest
protest and representative democracy interaction
race relations Britain
social movement analysis
Springbok Tours
state response to activism
Stockholm Peace Appeal
Welsh Language Society
White America
Work Shops
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367225575
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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First published in 1972. Militant protest is not new to British politics, but the widespread recourse to direct action, in Britain and abroad, is unprecedented. This book was the first comprehensive examination of contemporary protest in the British context. The contributors represented leading agencies of protest as well as those academics who had made this phenomenon their special concern. The result is a unique blend of direct experience and objective reflection.

The first part of the volume covers the theoretical and historical dimensions of protest, and is followed by a detailed consideration of specific issues (Ulster, race, the Bomb, students and community action). An analysis is then made of the reaction of the State to such protest through legislative and administrative channels. The final part shows the intermediary roles of political parties, MPs, the NCCL and the mass media. The book concludes with a critical examination of the interaction between protest and representative democracy and the implications which arise from it.

Students of politics and sociology as well as political activists of all shades of opinion will find this book essential to an understanding of the bases of protest movements.

Editors: Robert Benewick and Trevor Smith