The Dynamics of Nonviolence Knowledge*
Nonviolent action, despite its widespread use and successes, has received relatively little scholarly attention and financial support compared to military research and studies of conventional politics. Understanding the direction and content of knowledge about nonviolence is a project in the tradition of the sociology of knowledge that can help explain why the study of nonviolence has been marginalized, why misconceptions about it persist, why so much research in the area has been oriented to challenging regimes, and how nonviolence researchers are connected to nonviolence practice. This investigation leads to some suggestions for social movement scholars, in particular the value of studying agency and strategy, and the possibility of gaining insight by being involved in the movements being studied.
Contributor Notes
*I thank Tim Bryar, Sean Chabot, Antonino Drago, Jack DuVall, JØrgen Johansen, Tom Weber, and two anonymous reviewers for valuable comments on earlier versions of this article.
† Brian Martin is Professor of Social Science at the University of Wollongong, Australia. Please direct all corresponddence to Brian Martin at bmartin@uow.edu.au.