The International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (ICNC) is an independent, nonprofit educational foundation, founded by Jack DuVall and Peter Ackerman in 2002. [1] It promotes the study and utilization of nonmilitary strategies by civilian-based movements to establish and defend human rights, social justice and democracy.
Based in Washington, D.C., ICNC works with educational institutions and nongovernmental organizations in the United States and around the world to educate the global public and to influence policies and media coverage of the growing phenomenon of strategic nonviolent action. [2]
ICNC was founded by Peter Ackerman and Jack DuVall in 2002. Jack DuVall served as ICNC's president and founding director, while Peter Ackerman served as ICNC's Founding Chair. [3] [4] In 2015, Hardy Merriman transitioned into the role of ICNC president, then Senior Advisor then Secretary of the Board. [5]
DuVall is a writer and former public television executive. He was the executive producer of a television series, A Force More Powerful , on the PBS network. He is also a co-author of the companion book of the same name (Palgrave/St. Martin's Press 2001). The movie and book explore major 20th century nonviolent action campaigns and was nominated for and received numerous awards, including an Emmy nomination. [6]
Peter Ackerman, who died in 2022, received a PhD from the Tufts University's Fletcher School for Law and Diplomacy in the 1970s, working under Gene Sharp, a widely respected academic and founder of nonviolent conflict as an academic field. Ackerman later became a venture capitalist and philanthrope. He was a highly-paid associate of Michael Milken at Drexel Burnham Lambert in the 1980s specializing in leveraged buyouts. [7] During his academic career, Ackerman wrote a series of scholarly books on strategic nonviolent action. He also served on the board of Freedom House (including as chair between 2005 and 2009 [8] [9] ). He was a member of Council on Foreign Relations. [1]
In raising public awareness of the history and ideas of nonviolent conflict in both democratic and autocratic societies, ICNC has disseminated books, articles, broadcast media, video programming, computer games and other learning materials. Staff members and associated scholars have led seminars in North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East for journalists, activists, educators and NGO leaders on the history and dynamics of strategic nonviolent action.
ICNC involvement in seminars and workshops involving activists in human rights, pro-democracy and social justice campaigns overseas have led to charges from some governments of foreign intervention, though ICNC policy prohibits its presenters from giving specific advice regarding any particular struggle. Such workshops, according to ICNC policy, come only in response to specific requests from activist groups themselves and are not initiated by ICNC. ICNC also maintains a strictly apolitical posture, in that it works with groups challenging autocratic governments regardless of a given regime's ideological orientation or relations with the United States.
Many ICNC staff went on to work for democracy-promotion establishments such as the United States Institute of Peace, [10] a US nonpartisan, independent institute, founded by Congress and dedicated to a world without violent conflict.
ICNC has cooperated with other independent non-profit groups concerned with strategic nonviolent action, including the Albert Einstein Institution, Nonviolence International, and the Serbian-based Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS). For several years, ICNC was funded exclusively through a private family endowment. However, in 2021, ICNC began fundraising from outside funders in view of a leadership transition. ICNC maintains a strict policy of not collaborating with any government or government-funded entities.
Hardy Merriman, who is Secretary of the ICNC Board, [11] worked for the Albert Einstein Institution from 2002 to 2005. [12] Peter Ackerman funded the Albert Einstein Institution from its founding in 1983 until 2002. [13]
With more than 1,000 book chapters, articles, and other written and multimedia resources on civil resistance and nonviolent movements, ICNC's Resource Library is the largest online database of free resources on the topic in the world. [14] However, there are many other online outlets offering access to a variety of resources on this topic and related topics. [15] The library includes translations of many of these resources in more than 70 languages. [16]
In 2015, ICNC launched its own press called ICNC Press and has since published over 40 titles in English, Spanish, Tibetan, French, Polish, Portuguese and many other languages. The titles include academic monographs, resources for practitioners, workbooks/guides, policy-relevant reports, as well as memoires, all focusing on different nonviolent movements or dynamics of nonviolent conflict. Since 2021, ICNC Press titles have been available in the form of e-books and have been cited as references in numerous academic and policy publications. [17]
ICNC launched in June 2017 its multi-author Minds of the Movement blog. [18] As of June 2022, the blog counted more than 230 published posts, all focusing on the dynamics of civil resistance and nonviolent movements and campaigns worldwide, from history to the present. Amber French, blog managing editor, developed and launched the blog along with ICNC President Hardy Merriman and the input of numerous stakeholders, notably members of the ICNC Academic Board but also prominent nonviolent activists.
Blog content includes movement commentary, interviews, research syntheses, ideas and trends features, and book reviews. Bloggers (more than 100 authors as of June 2022) include academics, students, movement organizers and activists, journalists and diverse members of civil society from dozens of countries. Minds of the Movement blog posts have been translated into French, Thai, Ukrainian, Spanish, and other languages and have been cited in numerous bibliographies of books and policy reports. [19] Minds of the Movement joins a small number of original online news outlets like Waging Nonviolence [20] whose sole focus is civil resistance.
Since 2012, ICNC has offered numerous competitive-selection online courses for those interested in and working in or on civil resistance movements. ICNC offers different kinds of courses: 1) Moderated courses, which involve interactive discussion with peers and experts in the field; 2) Unmoderated, participant-run courses, which involve interactive discussions with peers moving through an expertly developed curriculum; 3) Individualized, self-paced courses for general and professional audiences with varying levels of background knowledge; and 4) the ICNC Academic Online Curriculum (AOC) on Civil Resistance, which is an extensive and regularly updated set of resources on civil resistance, organized into clearly structured topics and case studies, in order to facilitate easy learning and curriculum development. [21]
Due to the political nature of many of the problems facing ordinary people worldwide—authoritarianism, social injustices, human rights violations, disregard for the climate, and more—ICNC has received criticism for its work to educate activists in nonviolent civil resistance. Criticism usually generates with traditional powerholders who are targets of mass nonviolent movements against authoritarianism, as well as members of their entrenched regime. One example is pro-Chavez American-Venezuelan lawyer Eva Golinger who alleged that during 2005 and 2006, ICNC trained Venezuelan youths to try to reverse the government of Hugo Chávez, through "[impeding] the electoral process and [creating] a scenario of fraud," [22] claiming that ICNC did this together with USAID and NED as part of a systemic plan of implementing United States foreign policy aims in democratic countries. [23] ICNC denies it ever engaged in such trainings, [24] which are a violation of its charter. Jack Duvall has claimed that ICNC in 2007 supported the travel of two nonviolent activists to the World Social Forum in Caracas, at which they met with Chavez supporters to discuss methods of resisting any possible coup attempt. [24]
In response to criticism from regime supporters and other adversaries of nonviolent movements for rights, justice and freedom, ICNC reinforced its operating guidelines in 2015 to include the following:
Nonviolence is the personal practice of not causing harm to others under any condition. It may come from the belief that hurting people, animals and/or the environment is unnecessary to achieve an outcome and it may refer to a general philosophy of abstention from violence. It may be based on moral, religious or spiritual principles, or the reasons for it may be strategic or pragmatic. Failure to distinguish between the two types of nonviolent approaches can lead to distortion in the concept's meaning and effectiveness, which can subsequently result in confusion among the audience. Although both principled and pragmatic nonviolent approaches preach for nonviolence, they may have distinct motives, goals, philosophies, and techniques. However, rather than debating the best practice between the two approaches, both can indicate alternative paths for those who do not want to use violence.
James Morris Lawson Jr. is an American activist and university professor. He was a leading theoretician and tactician of nonviolence within the Civil Rights Movement. During the 1960s, he served as a mentor to the Nashville Student Movement and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. He was expelled from Vanderbilt University for his civil rights activism in 1960, and later served as a pastor in Los Angeles for 25 years.
The Albert Einstein Institution (AEI) is a non-profit organization specializing in the study of the methods of nonviolent resistance in conflict. It was founded by scholar Gene Sharp in 1983, and named after Albert Einstein.
Mubarak Awad is a Palestinian-American psychologist and an advocate of nonviolent resistance.
Nonviolence International (NI) acts as a network of resource centers that promote the use of nonviolence and nonviolent resistance. They have maintained relationships with activists in a number of countries, with their most recent projects taking place in Palestine, Sudan and Ukraine. They partnered with International Center on Nonviolent Conflict to update Gene Sharp's seminal work on 198 methods of nonviolent action through a book publication. NI has also produced a comprehensive database of nonviolence tactics, which stands as the largest collection of nonviolent tactics in the world. They partner with Rutgers University to provide the largest collection of nonviolence training materials in the world.
A Force More Powerful is a 1999 feature-length documentary film and a 2000 PBS series written and directed by Steve York about nonviolent resistance movements around the world. Executive producers were Dalton Delan and Jack DuVall. Peter Ackerman was the series editor and principal content advisor.
Peter Ackerman was an American businessman, the founder and former chairman of Americans Elect, and the founding chair of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict. Ackerman was the managing director of Rockport Capital, Inc and served as a member of IREX's Global Advisory Council.
Stephen Zunes is an American international relations scholar specializing in the Middle Eastern politics, U.S. foreign policy, and strategic nonviolent action. He is known internationally as a leading critic of United States policy in the Middle East, particularly under the George W. Bush administration, and an analyst of nonviolent civil insurrections against autocratic regimes.
Civil resistance is a form of political action that relies on the use of nonviolent resistance by ordinary people to challenge a particular power, force, policy or regime. Civil resistance operates through appeals to the adversary, pressure and coercion: it can involve systematic attempts to undermine or expose the adversary's sources of power. Forms of action have included demonstrations, vigils and petitions; strikes, go-slows, boycotts and emigration movements; and sit-ins, occupations, constructive program, and the creation of parallel institutions of government.
Bernard Lafayette, Jr. is an American civil rights activist and organizer, who was a leader in the Civil Rights Movement. He played a leading role in early organizing of the Selma Voting Rights Movement; was a member of the Nashville Student Movement; and worked closely throughout the 1960s movements with groups such as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and the American Friends Service Committee.
Nonviolent resistance, or nonviolent action, sometimes called civil resistance, is the practice of achieving goals such as social change through symbolic protests, civil disobedience, economic or political noncooperation, satyagraha, constructive program, or other methods, while refraining from violence and the threat of violence. This type of action highlights the desires of an individual or group that feels that something needs to change to improve the current condition of the resisting person or group.
Jack DuVall has a background in universities, television, federal United States administration and politics, and the United States Air Force. He was Executive Producer of Steve York's 1999 film A Force More Powerful together with Dalton Delan, and developed it into a television series and a book. He is the founding director of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict, together with founding chair Peter Ackerman.
The Palestinian Centre for the Study of Nonviolence (PCSN) was founded in 1983 by Mubarak Awad, a Palestinian-American psychologist, and an advocate of nonviolent resistance.
Erica Chenoweth is an American political scientist, professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. They are known for their research work on non-violent civil resistance movements.
Srđa Popović is a Serbian political activist. He was a leader of the student movement Otpor that helped topple Serbian president Slobodan Milošević. After briefly pursuing a political career in Serbia, he established the Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS) in 2003 and published Blueprint for Revolution in 2015. CANVAS has worked with pro-democracy activists from more than 50 countries, promoting the use of non-violent resistance in achieving political and social goals.
The Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies(CANVAS) is a non-profit, non-governmental, educational institution focused on the use of nonviolent conflict, based in Belgrade, Serbia. It was founded in 2004 by Srđa Popović and the CEO of Orion Telecom, Slobodan Đinović. Both were former members of the Serbian youth resistance movement, Otpor!, which supported the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević in October 2000. Drawing upon the Serbian experience, CANVAS seeks to educate pro-democracy activists around the world in what it regards as the universal principles for success in nonviolent struggle.
Stellan Vinthagen is a professor of sociology, a scholar-activist, and the Inaugural Endowed Chair in the Study of Nonviolent Direct Action and Civil Resistance at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he directs the Resistance Studies Initiative. He is also Co-Leader of the Resistance Studies Group at University of Gothenburg and co-founder of the Resistance Studies Network, as well as Editor of the Journal of Resistance Studies, and a Council Member of War Resisters International (WRI), and academic advisor to the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (ICNC). His research is focused on resistance, power, social movements, nonviolent action, conflict transformation and social change. He has since 1980 been an educator, organizer and activist in several countries, and has participated in more than 30 nonviolent civil disobedience actions, for which he has served in total more than one year in prison.
Diversity of tactics is a phenomenon wherein a social movement makes periodic use of force for disruptive or defensive purposes, stepping beyond the limits of nonviolent resistance, but also stopping short of total militarization. It also refers to the theory which asserts this to be the most effective strategy of civil disobedience for social change. Diversity of tactics may promote nonviolent tactics, or armed resistance, or a range of methods in between, depending on the level of repression the political movement is facing. It sometimes claims to advocate for "forms of resistance that maximize respect for life".
George Russell Lakey is an activist, sociologist, and writer who added academic underpinning to the concept of nonviolent revolution. He also refined the practice of experiential training for activists which he calls "Direct Education". A Quaker, he has co-founded and led numerous organizations and campaigns for justice and peace.
Dalia Ziada is an Egyptian writer. She is the author of The Curious Case of the Three-Legged Wolf - Egypt: Military, Islamism, and Liberal Democracy and other internationally acclaimed non-fiction books on Middle East politics. She currently works as the Chairperson of the Liberal Democracy Institute, and executive director of MEEM Center for Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean Studies.