Refine your search
COUNTRY
TYPE
YEAR
-
De-Escalating, Peacekeeping, Security at Events & Actions
-
Nonviolence Peacekeeping Handbook
20 pages
This handbook elaborates on the role of nonviolent peacekeepers and effective communication.
-
Conflict Mapping- Action Mapping
7 pages
This handout shows how people from different perspectives can build empathy and humanize conflict.
-
Handbook for Nonviolent Campaigns, Second Edition
-
Whose Priorities? A Guide for Campaigners on Military and Social Spending
-
Sri Lanka Training Project
5 pages
Schedule and evaluation of a 3 day training for Peace Brigade International volunteers in Sri Lanka.
-
Friendly Presence
-
A Short Report on Marshalling
-
A New Approach to Training Peacekeepers, for a New South Africa
-
Handbook for World Peacemaker Groups
-
Campus Organizing Guide for Peace & Justice Groups
-
Suggestions for Peacekeepers
-
Practical Peacekeeping
-
Peacekeepers
-
Handbook for Nonviolent Action
-
Nonviolent Civil Disobedience at CIA Headquarters, Langley, Virginia
15 pages
In April 1987, citizen action intended to make visible what the U.S. government wanted to keep hidden. On Monday, April 27, 1987, hundreds of people made history by engaging in the first nonviolent civil disobedience action at the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia. The action was the first time the American peace and justice movement directly challenges the post-Vietnam strategy of secret warfare. In this appeal, guidelines were given on how participants should engage in the action accordingly to maximize impact. Guidelines for the event included no property destruction, no weapons, no hopping of the White House fence, along with a full itinerary and a map of the C.I.A. exterior. Offered by the organizers was a preliminary in-person nonviolence training the day before and legal advice deemed necessary in case of arrests, such as the amount for bail and fines. In an effort to change detrimental policies, citizens organized and informed themselves of nonviolent etiquette and risk to improve the chance of success through the power of the people.
-
To Reagan's Doorstep. . . Handbook for Nonviolent Civil Disobedience at the White House, April 22, 1985
16 pages
This in an event handbook on nonviolent civil disobedience released in 1985 in Washington DC, for the April Action for Peace, Jobs, and Justice, that consisted of four days of direct actions against the Reagan Administration. The handbook not only outlines the intention of participants but also provides preparatory steps for the participants. The topics include nonviolence, scenarios/guidelines, maps, legal, noncooperation, representing yourself, affinity groups and support, decision making, racism, overcoming male oppression, a sign up sheet and a calendar. The demands of April Action for Peace, Jobs, and Justice in the book included stopping U.S. military intervention in Central America, supporting human freedom and dignity by also ending intervention in in the Caribbean, the Middle East, Asia, the Pacific, and Europe, creating jobs, and cutting the military budget.
-
De-Escalating, Peacekeeping, Security at Events & Actions
-
Nonviolence Peacekeeping Handbook
-
Conflict Mapping- Action Mapping
-
Handbook for Nonviolent Campaigns, Second Edition
-
Whose Priorities? A Guide for Campaigners on Military and Social Spending
-
Sri Lanka Training Project
-
Friendly Presence
-
A Short Report on Marshalling
-
A New Approach to Training Peacekeepers, for a New South Africa
-
Handbook for World Peacemaker Groups
-
Campus Organizing Guide for Peace & Justice Groups
-
Suggestions for Peacekeepers
-
Practical Peacekeeping
-
Peacekeepers
-
Handbook for Nonviolent Action
-
Nonviolent Civil Disobedience at CIA Headquarters, Langley, Virginia
-
To Reagan's Doorstep. . . Handbook for Nonviolent Civil Disobedience at the White House, April 22, 1985