604 research outputs found
Climate Change Disobedience
Among those who recognize climate change as an existential threat, some are willing to take dramatic action against it by committing civil disobedience. Activists, such as those taking part in the Extinction Rebellion in the United Kingdom, are willing to exchange their liberty for some putative good. There is no discussion in the disobedience literature of the discrete purposes of climate disobedience or the principles by which climate activists ought to be guided in seeking to fulfill those purposes. This Article takes on that task. After offering an overview of the purposes of civil disobedience, this Article isolates those purposes relevant to a climate disobedience campaign, identifies those principles by which climate disobedients should abide to achieve the purposes most attainable by climate disobedience, analyzes a serious limitation inherent in climate disobedience, and suggests measures to counteract the effects of the limitation. Finally, it critically examines Extinction Rebellion with a view to more effective future disobedience
Gandhi: The Spirituality and Politics of Suffering
This Article examines the 1982 film Gandhi. Although it took factual liberties with Gandhi\u27s life, Professor DiSalvo concludes that it accurately conveyed Gandhi\u27s dedication to self-suffering and philosophy of non-violence. The Article analyzes excerpts from the film which illustrate Gandhi\u27s five fundamental beliefs on the spirituality and politics of suffering. Those beliefs are in suffering as a weapon, as empowerment, as self-interest, as propaganda, and as reconciliation. The film Gandhi also masterfully introduced millions to Gandhi\u27s life, message, and legacy
Gaining Access to the Jury: A Critical Guide to the Law of Jury Selection in West Virginia, Part Two
Saying No to War in the Technological Age - Conscientious Objection and the World Peace Tax Fund Act
- …