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ICNC focuses on how ordinary people wage nonviolent conflict to win rights, freedom and justice.

  • New Publication for
    2025 Copenhagen People Power Conference

    Towards a People’s Peace

    This April, ICNC Press has released a collection of framing essays for the 2025 Copenhagen People Power Conference, in collaboration with ActionAid Denmark. This book brings together cutting-edge research and first-person accounts from activists and peacebuilders on the frontlines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Sri Lanka, alongside insights for a global solidarity movement from activists in Palestine, Ukraine, and Lebanon. It offers a bold vision for how movements can shape peace and security, and practical lessons for policymakers and allies committed to supporting peace from below.

    Download a Copy Today
  • Webinar:

    How Polish Judges Fought to Keep Their Independence

    with Dr. Marcin Mrowicki
    and panelists Elizabeth A. Wilson and Doug Coltart

    This webinar explores the ways in which the legal community can draw practical lessons from the Polish judiciary’s resistance to authoritarian pressures under the ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS). It delves into the tactics judges employed to safeguard their independence, from subtle acts of defiance within courtrooms to collective public resistance.

  • Recent Publication:

    All Rise: Judicial Resistance in Poland

    All Rise: Judicial Resistance in Poland by Dr. Marcin Mrowicki investigates the strategic and organized resistance of Polish judges against the authoritarian encroachments on judicial independence by the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party from 2015 to 2023. Under the leadership of Jarosław Kaczyński, PiS systematically targeted key judicial institutions like the Constitutional Tribunal and the Supreme Court, implementing reforms to undermine judicial autonomy. This assault sparked an unprecedented resistance movement among Polish judges, who employed legal and extralegal tactics to defend the rule of law.

    Download a Free Copy
  • Recent Publication:

     

    Fostering a Fourth Democratic Wave: A Playbook for Countering the Authoritarian Threat combines insights on civil resistance, democratic waves, autocratization, democratic backsliding, international law, and other disciplines to advance a foreign policy approach that supports and enables pro-democracy and human rights movements.

    Watch the promotional video and download the publication:

    Download a Free Copy
  • For Activists & Organizers

    How Agent Provocateurs Harm Our Movements

    by Steve Chase

    History shows us that peoples’ movements are more likely to suc­ceed when they have unity among supporters, widespread participa­tion, strategic planning, and non­violent discipline. Unsurprisingly, movement opponents use agent provocateurs—fake activists work­ing undercover—to behave in counterproductive ways that undermine these four keys to success.

    Drawing from international exam­ples, and an in-depth case study of the US Black Liberation Movement, this volume explores how agent provocateurs—and agent provoca­teur-like behavior—make movements smaller, weaker, and easier to de­feat. It also offers some ideas for how activists can inoculate their movements against such harms and increase their chances of success.

    • Download

    • Purchase

    • Watch the webinar presentation by the author

    Learn More
  • Second edition of :

    The Path of Most Resistance: A Step-by-Step Guide to Planning Nonviolent Campaigns

    by Ivan Marovic

    The Path of Most Resistance: A Step-by-Step Guide to Planning Nonviolent Campaigns is a practical guide for activists and organizers of all levels, who wish to grow their resistance activities into a more strategic, fixed-term campaign. It guides readers through the campaign planning process, breaking it down into several steps and providing tools and exercises for each step.

    The Second Edition released in March 2021 includes chapters on tactics and running a tactical planning workshop, and a Foreword by Hardy Merriman.

    Free Download:
    • Second edition: English
    • First edition: Catalan | French | Polish | Portuguese (Brazilian) | Spanish | Urdu

    Learn More
  • Visit our full resource library to find hundreds of resources on civil resistance in English and over 70 languages.

    Or, if you are interested in civil resistance and don’t know where to start, we’ve made a list of general introductory resources–many of them short articles–to introduce you to the field. See our list of ten key resources for activists and organizers.

    Visit the Resource Library
  • ICNC Translations Program

    Translating civil resistance literature into diverse languages is one of the most powerful ways to spread knowledge and increase the effectiveness of nonviolent movements struggling for rights, freedom, and justice. Learn more about our translations program or read our glossary of key terms.

    We also currently host resources on civil resistance in over 70 languages and dialects on our website.

    Find Translated Resources
  • For Scholars & Students

     

    The discipline of civil resistance has developed enormously in recent years, driven by new quantitative and qualitative scholarly research, as well as by numerous nonviolent movements around the world.

    ICNC runs a number of grant-supported academic and educational programs to meet the growing demand for cutting edge research, applied knowledge and practical skills in this field. Look at our research, writing, teaching and other educational offerings and review current calls for proposals or applications.

    Learn More
  • Academic Online Curriculum

    ICNC’s Academic Online Curriculum on Civil Resistance (AOC) is an online resource to advance curriculum development, teaching, and research on civil resistance. It offers an extensive and regularly updated set of resources in this field, organized into clearly structured topics and case studies, and drawn in part from content that we and various academic collaborators developed for the ICNC university seminars we’ve led since 2009.

    Anyone can register to use the AOC at any time and it is free to use.

    Topics on the AOC include:

    – Civil Resistance: Nature, Ideas and History
    – Strategic Considerations in Civil Resistance Struggles
    – Types of Civil Resistance Struggles

    And more!

    Register Now!
  • Calls from ICNC Academic Initiatives

    Throughout the year, ICNC is offering a number of academic opportunities, resources, and support that it  makes available to scholars and students. The field of civil resistance has grown immensely and these academic programs aim to respond to the growing demand for knowledge and skills and contribute to expanding the quality of education, research, and curriculum related to civil resistance. This page includes the current and past calls for the ICNC’s educational and research programs, such as learning opportunities, curriculum support, and research grants.

    One of our calls, the Rapid Field Research and Data Collection Program, accepts applications on a rolling basis and interested applicants can apply for the program throughout the year.

    Learn More
  • New from ICNC Press:

    Preventing Mass Atrocities: From a Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) to a Right to Assist (RtoA) Campaigns of Civil Resistance
    by Peter Ackerman and Hardy Merriman
    Available in: English, Arabic, and Spanish

    Events of the last decade demand new approaches to atrocity prevention that are adaptable, innovative and independent of a state-centered doctrine. With the aim of reducing risk factors such as civil war, we argue for a new normative framework called The Right to Assist (RtoA). […]

    See ICNC Press Publications
  • For the Policy Community

    New Publication:

    Fostering a Fourth Democratic Wave:
    A Playbook for Countering the Authoritarian Threat

    Fostering a Fourth Democratic Wave combines insights on civil resistance, democratic waves, autocratization and democratic backsliding, international law, and other disciplines to advance a foreign policy approach that supports and enables pro-democracy and human rights movements. It:

    1. Proposes new approaches and tools to support civil resistance movements

    2. Advances a new international norm — the “Right to Assistance”

    3. Develops strategic and tactical options to constrain authoritarian regimes and drive up the cost of their repression

    Download a Free Copy
  • ICNC Releases Major Study on International Support to Nonviolent Campaigns

    ICNC is proud to present the newest addition to its popular Monograph Series, The Role of External Support in Nonviolent Campaigns: Poisoned Chalice or Holy Grail? by Drs. Erica Chenoweth and Maria J. Stephan, authors of the groundbreaking civil resistance classic, Why Civil Resistance Works.

    Published by ICNC Press, this new report employs original, qualitative, and quantitative data to examine the ways that external assistance impacted the characteristics and success rates of post-2000 revolutionary nonviolent uprisings.

    Download the full monograph for free here.

    Watch the March 3 webinar with the renowned authors here.

    Read More
  • Minds of the Movement Blog

     

    Minds of the Movement is a blog for those interested in the ideas and experiences of people on the front line of civil resistance, and those who seek to understand the art and science of nonviolent struggle.

    Learn More
  • NEW BLOG POST

    Marcin Mrowicki writes: “During a three-year judicial training in Poland, I was taught how to deal with different cases as a judge. I had to pass a very difficult judicial exam knowing all Supreme Court case law in criminal and civil law. Nobody, however, taught me how to deal with populists, how to defend judicial independence, or how to communicate with the public in accessible language. Much less how to combat politicians’ lies and their attacks on courts. […]”

    Read more!
  • Virginie Pochon writes: “I’m sitting by the window in my office, in front of my computer. The chirping of birds and the backfire of a motorcycle are not enough to cover the explosions of heavy weapons nearby, up in the hills above Kenscoff, in Obléon, less than 5 kilometers away. The armed gangs launched their first attack on Kenscoff on January 27, 2025, in the Belot area. There, they massacred farmers and burned down their homes. […]”

    Read more!
  • Rosie Motene writes: “I had a very unconventional upbringing. I was born in 1974 in South Africa during the Apartheid era. At the time my mother was a domestic worker for a white Jewish family. The dynamics of being brought up through a white lens while my mother lived in the back room as the maid created many internal crises. […]”

    Read more!

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