031 haunting officials

methods of nonviolent protest and persuasion pressures on individuals
031 haunting officials banner

"As a means of reminding officials of the “immorality” of their behavior in repressing a nonviolent resistance movement and of the determination and fearlessness of the population, volunteers may sometimes follow and “haunt” officials everywhere they go, thus constantly reminding them of the population’s determination. For example, as Joan Bondurant has reported, during the 1928 Bardoli campaign in India: “Volunteers followed officials everywhere, camping on roads outside official bungalows. When arrested, they were replaced by others until authorities tired of the process.” 148"...

((Sharp, Gene. The Politics of Nonviolent Action (p. 169). Albert Einstein Institution. Kindle Edition.))

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013 deputations

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008 banners posters and displayed communications

banners posters and displayed communications

trending_up 8.5/10 as a pair
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137 refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse

refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse

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171 nonviolent interjection

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007 slogans caricatures and symbols

slogans caricatures and symbols

trending_down 6.4/10 as a pair
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High scoring campaigns using this method

Historical cases from the Nonviolent Action Database that used this method

Bardoli peasants campaign against the Government of Bombay, 1928

10.0/10

The Bombay Government (through its Revenue Department) had, in 1927, enhanced the land revenue assessment in the Bardoli taluka (county) by a nominal 22 percent, which, when applied, amounted in some cases to as much as 60 percent enhancement. This t...

English residents and environmentalists prevent Heathrow Airport expansion, 2002 – 2010

10.0/10

The London Heathrow Airport was of the busiest airports in the world when the English government began to contemplate expansion in 2002. Considered to be one of the premier airports in the world, the English government wanted to preserve the airport’...

Lawrence, MA factory workers strike "for Bread and Roses," U.S. 1912

10.0/10

As we come marching, marching, we battle too for men, For they are women's children, and we mother them again. Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes; Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses! - James Opp...

Serbians overthrow Milosevic (Bulldozer Revolution), 2000

10.0/10

During his first seven years as president of Serbia, Slobodan Milosevic led the country into several wars with Croatia and Bosnia and isolated it internationally. While he spent money on the country’s secret police and military, unemployment reached ...

Disabled activists sit in for enforcement of U.S. disability rights legislation, 1977

10.0/10

In 1973, American president Richard Nixon signed the Rehabilitation Act into law after vetoing its first two iterations. The legislation was concerned with funding vocational rehabilitation, services meant to help disabled individuals find employment...

Harvard students campaign for a living wage, 1998-2002

9.0/10

In the fall of 1998, Harvard students began a Living Wage Campaign that would last for almost four years. The Campaign was headed by the Progressive Student Labor Movement (PSLM) and aimed to help all Harvard employees receive a “living wage”. The de...

International environmental group Sea Shepherds defends whales in the Antarctic Ocean, 2012-2013

9.0/10

The International Whaling Commission permits whaling for research purposes and allows whales to be discarded by lethal means as long as whale meat is not used and sold from the specimens. Japanese whalers, who are permitted to whale strictly for rese...

PETA pressures Avon to stop animal testing, United States, 1989

9.0/10

The animal rights movement of the 1980’s moved into the mainstream media as it was joined by professionals and academics. The new public attention increased demand from concerned consumers for products developed without animal testing, and companies ...

University of Arizona students campaign against sweatshop-produced apparel, 1997-1999

9.0/10

The anti-sweatshop movement was the largest student activism movement in the United States since the South African divestment movement over ten years before. Students all around the country pressured college and university administrators to adopt str...

Chinese villagers occupy and close Zhuxi Chemical Park, Dongyang County, Zhejiang, 2001-2005

9.0/10

The town of Huashui, in Dongyang County, Zhejiang Province lies in eastern China. The town is known for plastic recycling, and is divided into 18 “administrative villages” that then have “natural villages” within them. Dongyang County opened the Zhux...

Low scoring campaigns using this method

Historical cases from the Nonviolent Action Database that used this method

MIT students campaign for divestment from apartheid South Africa, 1985-1991

2.0/10

In reaction to the continuing apartheid in South Africa, many colleges and universities in the United States divested from South Africa, meaning that they removed the holdings they had from companies which operated there. Apartheid separated blacks a...

Washington, DC protests against the war in Vietnam (Mayday), 1971

3.0/10

The Mayday protest was a series of large-scale demonstrations against the involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War. It happened in 1971 in Washington, DC from May 1 to May 3 and diminished within several days. The goal was to shut down the...

Effectiveness profile

Success by Opponent
Corporation / Business 6.7
Financial Institution 9.0
Government / State Body 8.3
Judiciary / Legal System 8.0
Military / Police 10.0
Success by Theme
Success by Group Type
Success by Region
Success by Campaign Scale
Success by Goal Magnitude

Risk profile

Risk by region

Compared to the worldwide average for this method

Africa
skull
Lethal Force and Harm trending_flat Average
personal_injury
Physical Assault (Non-Lethal) trending_flat Average
gavel
Arrests and Legal Action trending_flat Average
campaign
Intimidation and Harassment trending_flat Average
lock
Restrictions on Rights and Freedoms trending_flat Average
house_siding
Property Damage and Economic Reprisals trending_flat Average
Americas
Asia
Europe
Oceania

Risk by regime

Compared to the worldwide average for this method

Closed autocracy
Electoral autocracy
Electoral democracy
Liberal democracy