Civil disobedience summary
- when is civil disobedience justified
- when is civil disobedience justified examples
- when is civil resistance justified elaborate
- when is civil resistance justified
Civil disobedience examples!
NCJRS Virtual Library
Abstract
The orthodox definition of civil disobedience notes that civil disobedience is both illegal and civil, takes place in public, involves an act of protest, is nonviolent, is conscientiously-motivated, and involves both acceptance of the legitimacy of the system and submission to arrest and punishment.
However, characteristics like conscientiousness are not necessary to the definition, and those like nonviolence are inappropriate. Therefore, a more appropriate definition is that civil disobedience is a public act that deliberately contravenes a law, that is publicly-performed, and that occurs in awareness that an arrest and a penalty are likely.
Is civil disobedience legal
Many types of objections to civil disobedience have been raised, often based on the view that citizens in a democracy are obliged to obey the law. However, none of these objections are decisive against every act of civil justification.
Thus, civil disobedience may be morally justified, even in a democracy. 91 reference notes.
- when is civil disobedience not justified
- when is an act of civil disobedience justified