Academic literature on the topic 'Democratic Revolutionary Movement'

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Journal articles on the topic "Democratic Revolutionary Movement"

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Bai, Zuolian Wu Zhaoyao. "A Preliminary Exploration Of The Social Value Made By Chinese Female Pianists In The Democratic Revolution Movement In The First Half Of The 20th Century." Multicultural Education 8, no. 12 (2022): 8. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7391497.

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<em>This paper adopts the method of literature research and content analysis, and takes Chinese female pianists in the first half of the 20th century as the research object who dedicates themselves to the country and the party through direct participation in the democratic revolutionary movement and indirect investment. To explore their social value in the democratic revolutionary movement.That is to say, in the democratic revolutionary movement in the first half of the 20th century, Chinese female pianists, as one of the forces among the intellectuals, played a leading and exemplary role for
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ALLISON, MICHAEL E. "Why Splinter? Parties that Split from the FSLN, FMLN and URNG." Journal of Latin American Studies 48, no. 4 (2016): 707–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x1600136x.

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AbstractFollowing the ends to the civil wars in Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala, the revolutionary coalitions that had led the fight against authoritarian regimes began to fracture. However, none of the splinter parties that broke from the Sandinista National Liberation Front, Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, and Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unit has succeeded on their own as political parties. In this article, I argue that there is no single reason to explain the poor performances of the Democratic Party (PD), the Renovating Movement (MR), and the Democratic Front Party (F
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Schelchkov, Andrey. "«LEFT OPPOSITION» IN REVOLUTIONARY SPAIN." Latin-American Historical Almanac 32, no. 1 (2021): 118–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.32608/2305-8773-2021-32-1-118-148.

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The division in the international communist movement and the creation of Trotskyism movement coincided with turbulent revolutionary events in Spain, where the left-wing forces were building up their forces. As in many other countries, the split of the communists was reflected in do-mestic politics, one of the aspects of which was the confrontation and extreme hostility of the two currents in world communism. The Span-ish question and the situation in Spanish Trotskyism had a significant impact on the process of forming the doctrine of Trotskyism, primarily in the issue of electoral unions, att
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Liakhouski, Uładzimir. "“Red Landlord”. The Figure of Anatol Bonch-Osmolovsky and His Role in the Revolutionary Movement of Belarus." Studia Interkulturowe Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej, no. 13 (November 25, 2020): 3–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/2544-3135.si.2020-13.2.

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The article is devoted to the social and political activity of Anatol Osipovich Bonch-Osmolovsky, who was one of the best representatives of the neopopulist direction in the revolutionary movement of Belarus and Russia in 1905–1917. This political biography of one of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party leaders looks at the revolutionary process and the establishment of democratic institutions in a predominantly peasant country by following Bonch-Osmolovsky’s opinions. The attitudes of the “red landowner” to the farm program, to the SocialistRevolutionary Party’s terror, to the Belarusian nationa
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Xolmurodov, Murodjon. "BUKHARA AND XIV THE ATTACK ON THE EVE OF THE SOVIET INVASION. ACTIVITIES OF YOUNG PEOPLE." MODERN SCIENCE AND RESEARCH 3, no. 3 (2024): 285–90. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10809252.

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<em>The Khanate of Khiva was an important agent of the fragmented political structure in Turkestan after the Temirids. In 1873, the territories of West Turkestan occupied by Russia became a Russian mandate. The reformist Jadidism movement in Turkestan, after technical, social and political reforms, first focused on educational and cultural reforms, and naturally this movement also influenced Khiva and Bukhara khanates. The Jadidist movement in Turkestan, which was heavily influenced by the uprisings of 1905 and 1907 in Russia, influenced democratic movements in the Islamic world. Under the inf
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Bezarov, Oleksandr. "Participation of Jews in the processes of Russian social-democratic movement." History Journal of Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University, no. 53 (June 21, 2022): 131–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.31861/hj2021.53.131-142.

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The formation of social democracy in the Russian Empire was another stage in the «Russian reception» of the Western models of the socialist movement, the result of certain ideological contradictions on the Russian ground. Given the semi-feudal society of the Russian Empire, the paternalism of autocratic power, the absence of deep traditions of liberal culture, the Russian social democratic movement could hardly count on obvious success without a deep revolutionary renewal of the entire socio-economic and political system of the Russian state. Since Jews were an urban ethnic group, it is not su
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Ferree, Myra Marx. "Under different umbrellas: intersectionality and alliances in US feminist politics." European Journal of Politics and Gender 4, no. 2 (2021): 199–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/251510820x16068343934216.

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Macro-level forms of inequality work intersectionally to establish democracy normatively, as well as shape its institutions. Liberal democracies, once revolutionarily new political formations, rest on an equally revolutionary understanding of male domination based not on descent, but on economic arrangements (the new ‘breadwinner’ role) and political institutions (the ‘brotherhood’ national state). Over time, social movements have diminished liberal democracy’s original exclusions of women and minority ethnic men so that many citizens’ daily lives now contradict this once hegemonic normative o
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Nisnevich, Yuliy A. "The Revolution is Over, Forget It: To the 30th Anniversary of the Russian Federation." RUDN Journal of Political Science 23, no. 4 (2021): 545–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2313-1438-2021-23-4-545-559.

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After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the power in post-Soviet Russia was seized by the leaders of the democratic movement - first wave democrats, and the more progressive Soviet nomenclature. As a result of the miscalculations made by the leaders of the democratic movement, the representatives of the Soviet nomenclature soon started displacing the first wave democrats and the reformers of the Gaidar call from the Russian governmental bodies in order to gain full control over the governance in the country. This appeared to be a manifestation of the more general and fundamental process, where
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Fakhreddin Jafarov, Mammad Aliyev, Zenfira Seyidova. "Democratic Movement in Nakhchivan at the Beginning of the 20th Century." Journal of Information Systems Engineering and Management 10, no. 21s (2025): 365–72. https://doi.org/10.52783/jisem.v10i21s.3361.

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At the beginning of the 20th century, peasant uprisings and the national liberation movement against Tsarist rule in the Nakhchivan region gradually intensified. Fearing the general movement, the Tsarist government, along with its officials and agents, began to incite ethnic massacres among different nationalities. Their goal was to instigate conflicts while pretending to seek peace between the two nations. Democratic forces active in Nakhchivan sought to make the masses understand that these massacres were orchestrated by the Tsarist government and its supporting forces. Consequently, democra
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Merone, Fabio, and Francesco Cavatorta. "Salafist movement and sheikh-ism in the Tunisian democratic transition." Middle East Law and Governance 5, no. 3 (2013): 308–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763375-00503004.

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The article examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism in the context of the Tunisian transition to democracy. Building on primary sources and original field work, the article highlights the theoretical and practical divergences that affect the Salafist camp in Tunisia in its struggle to continue a revolutionary project for a sector of disenfranchised youth unwilling to support a process of renewal of political institutions that they perceive as contributing their marginalization. In addition, the article explores the ways in which, paradoxically, the emergence and public presence of Salafis
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Democratic Revolutionary Movement"

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Lee, Stephanie Jing. "Actualizing the Democratic Promise of American Public Education." Miami University Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=muhonors1210279461.

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Francescangeli, Eros. "La sinistra rivoluzionaria in Italia. Politica e organizzazione (1943-1978)." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3425284.

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This dissertation analyzes that peculiar political front that in the 1970s called itself, and was generally called «revolutionary left», in alternative to the «official», «traditional», or «historical» left represented by the Italian Communist Party (Pci) and the Italian Socialist Party (Psi). The research, however, embraces a longer time span of Italian socio-political history and the international labor movement, starting with the anarchist movement and the dissident organizations that in 1943-44 appeared within the socialist-communist traditions (Trotskyites, Bordigists, socialist left,
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Belo, José António Dias Mota. "Santa Maria – O Paquete Rebelde: Operação Dulcineia – “O acontecimento que viveu para ser esquecido”." Master's thesis, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/1995.

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O tema desenvolvido neste trabalho é o sequestro do navio de passageiros português Santa Maria, desencadeado em Janeiro de 1961 no mar das Caraíbas, acção a que foi dado o nome de “Operação Dulcineia”. Esta acção foi perpetrada por um grupo de revolucionários e activistas políticos portugueses e espanhóis, chefiados pelo ex-capitão do exército português Henrique Galvão, pelo espanhol de origem galega José Velo Mosquera, e pelo ex-comandante da marinha de guerra espanhola, também de origem galega, José Fernandéz Vásquez. Teve como principal objectivo desencadear uma acção armada de caráct
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Books on the topic "Democratic Revolutionary Movement"

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Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Congress,, ed. Delegations of Communist, workers', revolutionary demokratic [sic, i.e. democratic], socialist, social-democratic and other parties, organizations and movements participating in the 17th Congress of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. [s.n.], 1986.

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Zheltov, Maksim. Tunisian Revolution: prerequisites, features, legal grounds. INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1840175.

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The monograph is devoted to the consideration of one of the urgent problems of political theory and practice — the revolution of freedom and dignity in Tunisia, which opened the way for deep democratic transformations in the Islamic country. This revolution has become a convincing example of new, one might say unprecedented before, opportunities for revolutionary renewal of the world within the framework of the current law and without violence, based on revolutionary legality. For the first time in the Islamic world, the possibility of a certain and sufficiently broad cooperation between revol
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Miller, Paul B. From revolutionaries to citizens: Antimilitarism in France, 1870-1914. Duke University Press, 2002.

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Committee on Internal Security and US House of Representatives. Anatomy of a Revolutionary Movement: Students for a Democratic Society. University Press of the Pacific, 2005.

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Lause, Mark A. Universal Democratic Republicans. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036552.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the Universal Democratic Republicans, which formed the core of the union of “liberal societies” by early 1854. The listed participants included both the “Free Democratic League (Americans, opposed to the Extension of Slavery)” and the “Ouvrier Circle (American workmen).” Given that the personnel of these groups overlapped, the Brotherhood of the Union in New York saw itself alongside the revolutionary secret societies of Europe and their successors and, in an American context, as part of the radical wing of the antislavery movement. This coalition addressed American polit
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Palmer, R. R. The Age of the Democratic Revolution. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161280.003.0001.

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This chapter provides an overview of the book's main themes. This book deals with Western Civilization as a whole at a critical moment in its history, or with what has sometimes recently been called the Atlantic Civilization, a term probably closer to reality in the eighteenth century than in the twentieth. The book argues that this whole civilization was swept, in the last four decades of the eighteenth century, by a single revolutionary movement, which manifested itself in different ways and with varying success in different countries, yet in all of them showed similar objectives and princip
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Palmer, R. R. 1798: The High Tide of Revolutionary Democracy. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161280.003.0026.

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The period of about a year beginning late in 1797 was the high point of the whole decade, and indeed of all European history until 1848, in the matter of international agitation stirred up by the revolutionary-democratic movement. This chapter attempts to recapture this moment of excitement, and to offer an impression of the movement as a whole before following it again in separate countries. Events happened so swiftly, with so little central direction, and yet with so many immediate repercussions over hundreds and thousands of miles, that no plan of exposition can do justice to the reality, w
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Kuznetsova, Alexandra, and Sergey Sergeev. Revolutionary nationalism in contemporary Russia. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474433853.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the main varieties and trends in the development of national revolutionary organisations in Russia from the 1990s until 2010s: national Bolsheviks, national anarchists, national socialists (supporters of the ‘white revolution’), and national democrats. It shows how the genesis of the various Russian national revolutionary organisations is closely connected with the social and economic crises that have struck post-Soviet Russia: the Russian ‘ressentiment’ of the 1990s gave rise to the national Bolsheviks; the economic growth of the 2000s, accompanied by an influx of migran
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Palmer, R. R., and David Armitage. The Age of the Democratic Revolution. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161280.001.0001.

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For the Western world, the period from 1760 to 1800 was the great revolutionary era in which the outlines of the modern democratic state came into being. Here for the first time in one volume is the author's account of this incendiary age. The book argues that the American, French, and Polish revolutions—and the movements for political change in Britain, Ireland, Holland, and elsewhere—were manifestations of similar political ideas, needs, and conflicts. The book traces the clash between an older form of society, marked by legalized social rank and hereditary or self-perpetuating elites, and a
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Wolfson, Todd, ed. Governance: Democracy All the Way Down. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038846.003.0006.

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This chapter examines indymedia's multilayered, transnational application of direct democracy, which in many ways anticipates and sets the stage for Occupy Wall Street. It focuses on the ways that democracy is understood and enacted by indymedia activists—from the development of an open media system where anyone can speak (democratizing the media), to the preference for consensus-based decision making (democratic governance), and the belief that activists must develop the structures, processes, and relationships within the movement that they aim to achieve in the world (prefigurative politics)
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Book chapters on the topic "Democratic Revolutionary Movement"

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Horváth, Csaba. "A népuralom kísérlete és bukása." In Fontes et Libri. Szegedi Tudományegyetem, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/btk.2023.sje.8.

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József Sipos was the supervisor of my thesis that analysed the activities of the Social Democrats in 1918–1919. Later, a decisive element of our teacher-student and increasingly friendly relationship was a multitude of our professional discussions about the revolutionary period, one of the central issues of which was the failure to build a democratic system in 1918–1919. József Sipos believed that one of the most important reasons for this failure was the fact that a worker-peasant alliance – historically been burdened anyway in our current terminology – could not be realized. Accordingly, his
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Dorrien, Gary. "New Left, Old Left, and Michael Harrington." In American Democratic Socialism. Yale University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300253764.003.0006.

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The Shachtmanites who took over the Socialist Party in the late 1950s had a vision of a realigned Democratic Party that put trade unions at the center, supported the civil rights movement, and drove out the party’s Dixiecrat flank. They said the Democratic Party was becoming a labor party in disguise. Meanwhile the leaders of Students for a Democratic Society called for a New Left, lumping together communists and anticommunist socialists as the Old Left. The left broke apart in the 1960s over the exotic turmoil of the antiwar, wave two feminist, Black Power, and Third World revolutionary movem
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Fishman, Robert M. "Change or Continuity in Cultures?" In Democratic Practice. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190912871.003.0007.

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This chapter poses the large theoretical question of what generates cultural change or continuity, and provides examples of both patterns in the cases examined in the book. The large-scale program of commemorations of Portugal’s Carnation Revolution is treated in depth, taking it as an example of a mechanism providing for cultural continuity in that post-revolutionary polity. Obviously, revolution itself contributed earlier to cultural change in that case. In the Spanish case efforts to promote cultural change during the Zapatero years, in the 15-M movement, and more recently in contemporary p
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Biess, Frank. "Revolutionary Angst." In German Angst. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198714187.003.0007.

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This chapter analyzes the impact of the West German student movement on the history of fear and on emotional culture more generally. The “68ers” propagated an expressive emotional culture that partly displaced the older repressive emotional culture. The student movement celebrated the public display of emotions and enabled a new significance of emotions within political activism and for individual subjectivities. The chapter brings into focus the specific role that fear and anxiety played in shaping the political outlooks and subjectivities of student activities. While historians have often em
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Gordon, Joel. ""Each of You Shall Be Gamal"." In Nasser's Blessed Movement. American University in Cairo Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5743/cairo/9789774167782.003.0011.

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This chapter examines Gamal Abdel Nasser' transformation from conspirator in the July revolution to public statesman. The revolution of the Free Officers began to take form in the third year of their military rule. Following the March crisis, the officers abandoned plans to restore democratic life in Egypt in the near future. They used the police to preserve order, and occasionally to create disorder. The chapter considers the assassination attempt on Nasser by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood in October 1954—known as the Manshiya incident—and the Command Council of the Revolution's (CCR) su
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Foner, Eric. "Paine and the New Nation." In Tom Paine and Revolutionary America. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195174861.003.0006.

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Abstract The demise of the popular movement for price controls in 1780 inaugurated one of the most controversial and puzzling periods of Paine’s career. During the 1770s, he had been associated with the “democratic party in Philadelphia” in the struggle for independence and the Pennsylvania Constitution. Now he found himself increasingly at odds with some of his erstwhile allies, while appearing to find his former political enemies congenial. Courted by men of wealth and political standing, he seemed closer in outlook to the merchant elite of Philadelphia.
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van de Sande, Mathijs. "A New Society in the Shell of the Old." In Prefigurative Democracy. Edinburgh University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474451857.003.0002.

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The term ‘prefiguration’ is typically associated with anarchist and syndicalist workers’ movements. Rather than to pursue radical societal change as a future ideal that must be realised after a revolution, anarchists have always sought to seek self-liberation within their own revolutionary movement and practices. Today, this is often referred to as ‘prefiguration’, but traditionally it has also been described as an attempt to ‘build a new society in the shell of the old.’ This chapter reconstructs different anarchist conceptions of prefiguration as a view of revolutionary change, focusing spec
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Gage, Beverly. "The Blob and the Mob." In Rethinking American Grand Strategy. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190695668.003.0003.

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This chapter explores social movements as a new lens through which to approach grand strategy. Although grand strategists and social movement strategists often view each other as opposites, they have more to learn from each other—and more in common—than either group might think. Within the realm of strategic thought, there has long been significant intellectual overlap between military, political, and social-movement approaches. Far from standing apart from questions of war and peace, stability and instability, conflict and diplomacy, nearly every significant movement for social change has act
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Pinckney, Jonathan C. "“The Elephant’s Tail”." In From Dissent to Democracy. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190097301.003.0005.

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This chapter presents the first of three case studies of civil resistance transitions (CRTs) and the impact of the challenges of mobilization and maximalism in CRTs. The case examined is the transition in Nepal following the 2006 Second People’s Movement that overthrew the Nepali monarchy. The case study shows that while the Nepali transition had high levels of social mobilization, its high levels of maximalism have undermined the consolidation of new democratic institutions and led to Nepal’s transitioning to a fractious semi-democracy. Nepal’s various political forces have used revolutionary
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"Vladimir Lenin: What Is to Be Done?" In Milestone Documents in World History. Schlager Group Inc., 2024. https://doi.org/10.3735/9781961844056.book-part-106.

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What Is to Be Done? is a political pamphlet written by Vladimir Ilich Lenin, the architect of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia and one of the chief founders of the Soviet Union. Lenin’s real last name was Ulyanov (sometimes spelled Ulianov). He began writing What Is to Be Done? in 1901, and it was published in 1902 under the name “N. Lenin.” Although it is only a single document in the large corpus of Lenin’s writings, it is often considered his most important. This is because it appears to provide a blueprint for the final form of the Bolshevik Party and therefore also for the revoluti
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Conference papers on the topic "Democratic Revolutionary Movement"

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Xiaojin, Wei. "On Anna Seghers' Acceptance of China in the 1920s and 1930s." In XII Congress of the ICLA. Georgian Comparative Literature Association, 2024. https://doi.org/10.62119/icla.2.8435.

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Anna Seghers is a famous German anti-fascist writer in the 20th century and a famous proletarian revolutionary fighter, her work is notable for exploring and depicting the moral experience of the Second World War. Born into a Jewish family and married to a Hungarian Communist, Seghers escaped Nazi-controlled territory through wartime France. She returned to Europe after the war, living in West Berlin (1947–50), which was occupied by Allied forces. She eventually settled in the German Democratic Republic, where she worked on cultural and peace issues. She received numerous awards and in 1967 wa
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Geremew, Birhanu Bitew. "Constructing Amhara Identity: Nationalist Strategies and the Politics of Ethnic Identity in Ethiopia." In 6th World Conference on Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences and Education. Eurasia Conferences, 2024. https://doi.org/10.62422/978-81-970328-4-4-027.

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Drawing on data from interviews, mainstream and social media platforms, and political manifestos, this paper examines the strategies adopted by Amhara nationalists to construct a collective Amhara identity. Amhara nationalism emerged in response to the structural violence inflicted on the Amhara by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), which seized power in 1991. The EPRDF, an alliance of ethnonationalist fronts with an anti-Amhara stance, perpetrated various forms of structural violence against the Amhara, including killings, evictions, economic marginalization, polit
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Ugur, Etga. "RELIGION AS A SOURCE OF SOCIAL CAPITAL? THE GÜLEN MOVEMENT IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE." In Muslim World in Transition: Contributions of the Gülen Movement. Leeds Metropolitan University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.55207/clha2866.

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This paper asks: when and under what conditions does religion become a source of coopera- tion rather than conflict? The Gülen movement is an Islamic social movement that bases its philosophy on increasing religious consciousness at the individual level and making Islam an important social force in the public sphere. It is this intellectual and social activism that has made the movement a global phenomenon and the focus of socio-political analysis. The Gülen community brings different sectors of society together to facilitate ‘collective intellectual effort’ and offer ‘civil responses’ to soci
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