Dissertation Defense: Johnny Mack - Nonviolence as a Theory of Social Change and Human Development for the Peace and Conflict Field

Event and Presentation
Johnny Mack
Johnny Mack
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Kevin Avruch
Kevin Avruch
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Richard Rubenstein
Dissertation Defense: Johnny Mack - Nonviolence as a Theory of Social Change and Human Development for the Peace and Conflict Field
Event Date:

April 19, 2016 2:00pm through 4:00pm

Event Location: Metropolitan Building, Conference Room 5183
Past Event
Event Type: Event

Dissertation  Defense: Johnny Mack
After Confrontation, Then What?: Nonviolence as a Theory of Social Change and Human Development for the Peace and Conflict Field


April 19th, 2016
2:00pm - 4:00pm
Metropolitan Building Room 5183

 

Committee Members:
Chairs: Prof. Kevin Avruch
Prof. Richard Rubenstein 
Prof. Lester R. Kurtz

Abstract: This dissertation argues nonviolence is not only underutilized, but also under-theorized and, thus, not wholly understood in the field of peace and conflict. Its findings interpret Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s ideas of “peaceable power” and a “revolution of values.” Its conclusions rearticulate nonviolence as a “meta-logic” that subsumes three discrete forms: direct, structural, and cultural. One might recognize these concepts as counter-posing to Johan Galtung’s seminal work on violence. This is precisely the author’s intent: the nonviolence meta-logic and counter-pose become a heuristic model or (non)violence continuum and a framework for palpable theory and praxis for the peace and conflict field.

Using the mid-twentieth century US civil rights movement and the work and writings of Dr.  King, the author conducted qualitative research through case study and grounded theory, as well as thematic and hermeneutic content analysis on an extensive literature review. Drawing on theoretical frameworks proffered by Johan Galtung, Paulo Freire, and Etienne Balibar, the author rearticulates nonviolence theory and praxis as a new logic of nonviolence that reinterprets its putative meaning beyond resistance or direct action, whether pragmatic or principled.

 

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