Who is responsible for the downfall of “bad” regimes throughout history? Are they the “brave”, the small number of dissidents who can be found in every political system, turning openly against it, while endangering themselves, often even their lives, because they are tired of living in a lie? Or are they rather the “cowards,” those millions of subject-citizens who, though unwilling to risk their lives, engage in daily, small, yet fully conscious acts of subversion against a hated government, and slowly but surely undermine it from within, until its downfall? This question will be discussed in this paper. Its final attitude is based on the pioneering work of the American political scientist and anthropologist James Scott over the last 45 yea...
This paper examines the conceptual underpinnings of Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of “symbolic violence ...
Attention to everyday forms of resistance in the liberal peace debates has provided a more sophistic...
The end of the Cold War has seen the resurgence of old patterns of internal and external armed confl...
As a practice, failure recognizes that alternatives are embedded already in the dominant and that po...
The uprisings in Tibet, the disturbances in the outskirts of Paris, a single man on Tiananmen Square...
Social mobilizations today often use the strategies of the weak rather than the strong. The slogan ‘...
This article explores an insufficiently problematised aspect of conventional Dirty Hands (DH) analys...
This study attempts to offer Michel Foucault’s power concept about the evidence of undermining power...
Michel Foucault’s construction of power offers a revaluation of the modern “perpetual ba...
This paper constitutes a critique of Scott’s theory of everyday resistance, and the use of these con...
This introductory essay draws attention to two processes, the pathologization and exoticization of r...
In this study I approach the contradictory, contentious, and competing notions of resistance as a co...
Weber's definition of power includes the existence of a social relationship, but also a possibility ...
During last century theorists of power analysis have been struggling to find the answer to the quest...
Suffering, Politics, Power argues that human suffering on a global scale constitutes the most urgent...
This paper examines the conceptual underpinnings of Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of “symbolic violence ...
Attention to everyday forms of resistance in the liberal peace debates has provided a more sophistic...
The end of the Cold War has seen the resurgence of old patterns of internal and external armed confl...
As a practice, failure recognizes that alternatives are embedded already in the dominant and that po...
The uprisings in Tibet, the disturbances in the outskirts of Paris, a single man on Tiananmen Square...
Social mobilizations today often use the strategies of the weak rather than the strong. The slogan ‘...
This article explores an insufficiently problematised aspect of conventional Dirty Hands (DH) analys...
This study attempts to offer Michel Foucault’s power concept about the evidence of undermining power...
Michel Foucault’s construction of power offers a revaluation of the modern “perpetual ba...
This paper constitutes a critique of Scott’s theory of everyday resistance, and the use of these con...
This introductory essay draws attention to two processes, the pathologization and exoticization of r...
In this study I approach the contradictory, contentious, and competing notions of resistance as a co...
Weber's definition of power includes the existence of a social relationship, but also a possibility ...
During last century theorists of power analysis have been struggling to find the answer to the quest...
Suffering, Politics, Power argues that human suffering on a global scale constitutes the most urgent...
This paper examines the conceptual underpinnings of Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of “symbolic violence ...
Attention to everyday forms of resistance in the liberal peace debates has provided a more sophistic...
The end of the Cold War has seen the resurgence of old patterns of internal and external armed confl...