Civil Disobedience Filosofía Enciclopedia
Civil Disobedience Filosofía Enciclopedia
Civil Disobedience Filosofía Enciclopedia
First published Thu Jan 4, 2007; substantive revision Wed Jun 2, 2021
From the Boston Tea Party to Mahatma Gandhi’s Salt March, and from suffragists’
illegally casting their ballots to whites-only lunch counter sit-ins, civil disobedience has
often played a crucial role in bending the proverbial arc of the moral universe toward
justice. But what, if anything, do these acts, and countless others which we refer to as civil
disobedience have in common? What distinguishes them from other forms of
conscientious and political action?
On the most widely accepted account, civil disobedience is a public, non-violent and
conscientious breach of law undertaken with the aim of bringing about a change in laws
or government policies (Rawls 1999, 320). On this account, people who engage in civil
disobedience operate at the boundary of fidelity to law, have general respect for their
regime, and are willing to accept the legal consequences of their actions, as evidence of
their fidelity to the rule of law. Civil disobedience, given its place at the boundary of
fidelity to law, is said on this view to fall between legal protest, on the one hand, and
conscientious refusal, uncivil disobedience, militant protest, organized forcible
resistance, and revolutionary action, on the other hand.
This picture of civil disobedience, and the broader accounts offered in response, will be
examined in the first section of this entry, which considers conceptual issues. The second
section contrasts civil disobedience, broadly, with other types of protest. The third
focuses on the justification of civil disobedience, examining upstream why civil
disobedience needs to be justified, and downstream what is its value and role in society.
The fourth examines states’ appropriate responses to civil disobedience.
1.2 Civility
What makes an act of disobedience civil? Scholars commonly consider all or some of the
five features below to define civil disobedience.
1.2.1 Communication
Typically, a person who commits an offense has no wish to communicate with her
government or society. This is evinced by the fact that usually such a person does not
intend to make it known that she has offended. In contrast, civil disobedience is
understood as a communicative act – a kind of symbolic speech, which aims to convey a
message to a certain audience, such as the government and public. Civil disobedients are
thought to contribute arguments to the public sphere. Typically, their message is a call
for reform or redress; and their audience is the majority. Civil disobedience is variously
described as an act by which “one addresses the sense of justice of the majority of the
community” (Rawls 1999, 320), as “a plea for reconsideration” (Singer 1973, 84–92),
and as a “symbolic… appeal to the capacity for reason and sense of justice of the
majority” (Habermas 1985, 99). Even when scholars expand the central criteria for civil
disobedience, they agree that civil disobedience is essentially communicative. In
comparison, other types of principled disobedience are not necessarily communicative.
For instance, animal rescue primarily seeks to relieve the suffering of the rescued animals;
the tactic of environmental sabotage known as ‘tree-spiking’ primarily seeks to prevent
or stall the cutting down of trees (Delmas 2018a, 44–45). Both types of action can of
course be understood in terms of their messages, too, but communicating such a message
is not their primary aim in each case.
1.2.2 Publicity
On many accounts, civil disobedience must be not only communicative, but also public
in a specific way. Publicity may designate different features: (i) the openness of the act,
(ii) non-anonymity of the agent, (iii) advance warning of planned action, (iv)
responsibility-taking for the action, or (v) an appeal based in publicly shared principles
of justice. The first four requirements may be classified together under the umbrella
of publicity-as-visibility, while the fifth can be dubbed publicity-as-appeal. Since the
latter requirement matters mainly for the justification of civil disobedience, it is discussed
below (§3.2). That said, Rawls (1999, 321), for one, clarifies the publicity of civil
disobedience by describing it as a “political act,” to wit, “an act guided and justified by
political principles, that is, by the principles of justice which regulate the constitution and
social institutions generally,” thereby suggesting that publicity-as-appeal is in fact part of
the definition of civil disobedience.
Rawls and Hugo Bedau (1961, 655), on whom Rawls relies, defend all of the features of
publicity-as-visibility, arguing that civil disobedience could never be covert or secretive
but could only ever be committed in public, openly, and with advance warning to
authorities (per (i)–(iii); and additionally that it involves responsibility-taking (iv). The
thought is that publicity is crucial to the civil disobedient’s communicative aims and that
any violation of these features of publicity would obscure or muddy the nature of civil
disobedience as a communicative act. Critics have rejected the requirement to give
advance warning as a defining criterion of civil disobedience. If a person publicizes her
intention to breach the law, by giving advance notice about it, then she provides legal
authorities with the opportunity to abort her action (Dworkin 1985, 115; Smart 1991,
206–7). For instance, anti-nuclear activists who advertise their planned trespass on
military property would simply be prevented from executing their action. In this case, not
giving advance warning is necessary to accomplish the communicative act.
Some theorists have also denied the first two publicity requirements above that civil
disobedients need to act openly and non-anonymously. Some argue that publicity is
compatible with covertness and anonymity, so long as agents claim responsibility for
their actions after the fact (Greenawalt 1987, 239; Brownlee 2012, 160; Scheuerman
2018, 43–5). For instance, Edward Snowden’s leaks of classified information about the
National Security Agency (NSA)’s massive surveillance programs constitute acts of civil
disobedience in this view because, although Snowden obtained and leaked the documents
covertly, he eventually claimed responsibility and sought to publicly justify his actions
(Scheuerman 2014, 617–21; Brownlee 2016, 966). In this view, the only publicity
requirement is (iv) that agents take self-identifying responsibility for their actions after
the fact. The other requirements of publicity-as-visibility – openness, non-anonymity,
and advance warning – can in fact detract from or undermine the attempt to communicate
through civil disobedience and are therefore not necessary to identify civil disobedience.
Given, however, that there is often widespread reluctance to regard as “civil” covert and
anonymous acts of disobedience such as assistance to undocumented migrants or
anonymous hacktivism, other thinkers accept (i), (ii), and (iv) as standard requirements
of publicity-as-visibility and deem covert acts to be uncivil without pre-judging their
degree of justifiability (Delmas 2018a, 44–5).
1.2.3 Non-violence
Like publicity, non-violence is supposed to be essential to the communicativeness of a
civilly disobedient act, non-violence being part of its legibility as a mode of address. “To
engage in violent acts likely to injure and to hurt is incompatible with civil disobedience
as a mode of address. Indeed, any interference with the civil liberties of others tends to
obscure the civilly disobedient quality of one’s act” (Rawls 1999, 321). (The strategic
and tactical value of non-violence is discussed in §3.3.) Critics have objected to the
supposed incompatibility between violence and communication, arguing that violence,
depending on its form and targets, does not necessarily obscure the communicative
quality of a disobedient’s act. Burning a police car or vandalizing a Confederate
monument, as some protesters did under the Black Lives Matter banner, conveys a clear
message of opposition to police brutality and anger at the state’s failure to address
systemic racism. The compatibility between violence and communication is further
underscored in cases of self-directed violence: self-immolation may provide “an eloquent
statement of both the dissenter’s frustration and the importance of the issues he
addresses” (Brownlee 2012, 21–2). On this basis, some scholars deny altogether the
requirement that civil disobedience be non-violent (M. Cohen 1970, 103; Brownlee 2012,
198–9; Moraro 2019, 96–101).
Some scholars also see nothing inherently contradictory in the notion of “violent civil
disobedience” independent of its communicative aims. John Morreall views a person’s
physical assault on a slave owner chasing a runaway slave, in violation of the Fugitive
Slave Act of 1850, as a case of “justifiable violent civil disobedience” (1976, 42–3).
Jennifer Welchman considers “violence, threats of violence, covert acts of sabotage,
blackmail, and even assault” as means that civil disobedients can justifiably use to
obstruct and frustrate injustice (2001, 105). But, arguably this route is too hasty, as it
disregards what seems to be an essential and powerful association between civil
disobedience and non-violence: the civility of civil disobedience seems to entail non-
violence. The difficulty is to specify the appropriate notions of violence and non-
violence.
This is a difficult task in part given its high political stakes: protests labeled as non-violent
are more likely to be perceived favorably; protests labeled as violent are more likely to
alienate the public and to be met with violent repression. In addition, the labeling of
protests, as Robin Celikates notes, “far from being a neutral observation, is always a
politically charged speech act that can reproduce forms of marginalization and exclusion
that are often racialized and gendered” and tends to serve the interests of socially
dominant or mainstream voices (2016, 983). On this basis, Celikates casts doubt on the
usefulness of “a fixed category of non-violence … for a philosophical analysis of
disobedience informed by its social and political reality” (ibid.). Nonetheless, specifying
the categories of violence and non-violence is important to push back against
disingenuous uses of these categories, as when the police declare a peaceful protest a
‘riot’ – a common occurrence in the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests (ACLED 2020).
One way to conceive of violence is as the use of physical force causing or likely to cause
injury (Rawls 1999, 321). However, non-violent acts or even legal acts may indirectly
yet foreseeably cause more harm to others than do direct acts of physical force. A legal
strike by ambulance workers or a roadblock on an important highway may well have
more severe consequences than minor acts of vandalism (Raz 1979, 267). Psychological
violence can also cause injury to others. Philosophers typically reject the childhood chant
that “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” recognizing
that harm and injury do not come solely from the use of physical force. For one thing,
words can incite physical violence. Words can also hurt even without the threat of
physical injury, such as verbal insult and harassment, which can undermine the recipient’s
sense of equal standing, self-worth, and safety. The implication for civil disobedience is
that the requirement of non-violence prohibits the use of tactics likely to inflict
psychological violence on one’s opponents. Aggressive confrontations designed to
denigrate and humiliate (distinct from attempts to elicit shame through displays of
unearned suffering and appeals to conscience) are incompatible with the civility and non-
violence of civil disobedience.
Rawls does not mention, and it is unclear whether, non-violence prohibits certain actions
that don’t physically or psychologically injure others but still cause harms, such as
property damage (e.g., vandalism), violence to self (e.g., hunger strikes), and coercion
(e.g., forceful occupation).
Property damage: Authorities, much of the public, and many scholars tend to conceive
of non-violence strictly, as excluding any damage to property (Fortas 1968, 48–9, 123–
6; Smith 2013, 3, 33; Smith and Brownlee 2017, 5; Regan 2004). Two broad reasons may
explain the inclusion of property damage within the category of violence. One is the
classical liberal understanding of private property as an extension of one’s person; the
other is the assumption that property damage is likely to lead to violence against persons.
John Locke formulates both when he argues it is “lawful for a man to kill a thief, who
has not in the least hurt him, nor declared any design upon his life … [because] I have no
reason to suppose, that he, who would take away my liberty, would not, when he had me
in his power, take away every thing else” (Locke 1690, III §18). By counting all instances
of property destruction as violent, such a view dissuades one from drawing evaluative
distinctions among different cases, methods, targets, and aims. However, not all property
damage is or should be viewed as equal: burning one’s Selective Service card to protest
the military draft is not equivalent to burning crosses to intimidate African Americans
and Jews; smashing a stained-glass window depicting enslaved persons in a cotton field
(as a Yale janitor did in 2016) is not equivalent to smashing the windows of a store in
order to loot it. For some thinkers, such differences are not only issues of justification.
They insist that violence and non-violence simply do not exhaust the descriptive
possibilities and that we should think of property damage as a third conceptual category
distinct from the other two and requiring its own evaluative assessment (Sharp 2012a,
307; Delmas 2018a, 49, 244–5). Other scholars have instead argued that non-violence
can encompass property damage (Milligan 2013, ch. 2; Scheuerman 2018, 46–7, 77, 87).
They hold that civil disobedients can remain non-violent while engaging in selective
destruction of property, assuming the damage is minor and relates clearly to the civil
disobedient’s message, such as when pacifists hammer warhead nose cones.
Self-violence: Self-violent protests include tactics such as lip-sewing, self-cutting, hunger
strikes, self-exposure to the elements, and self-immolation. When theorists list hunger
strikes among the tactics of civil disobedience, they often do not address the question of
whether self-violence is compatible with non-violence properly conceived, but simply
assume an affirmative answer. Some scholars cast doubt on this notion, given the violence
of self-destructive protests and given activists’ self-understanding of their own actions
(see Bargu’s 2014 critical ethnographic study on the 2000–2007 death fast by left-wing
militants in Turkish prisons). A notable exception to the theoretical neglect of self-
violence is Gandhi (1973, 103–5, 120–5), who thought that hunger strikes were coercive
and violent but that fasts of moral pressure and Satyagrahic fasts were persuasive and
non-violent (Sharp 2012a, 134, 151, 262); and likewise, that self-immolation could
accord with non-violence (ahimsa) and be fueled by satyagraha (‘Truth-force’ in
Sanskrit) under the right circumstances (Gandhi 1999, 79.177; Milligan 2014, 295–9).
Coercion and persuasion: Theorists often complete the dichotomy between violence and
non-violence by seeing violence as a means of coercion, non-violence as a means of
persuasion, and the two as incompatible. Coercion can be defined as “any interference by
an agent, A, in the choices of another agent, B, with the aim of compelling B to behave
in a way that they would not otherwise do” (Aitchison 2018a, 668; see also entry
on coercion). Persuasion, by contrast, requires initiating a dialogue with an interlocutor
and aiming to elicit a change of position or even their moral conversion. Coercive tactics
impose costs on opponents. For instance, land occupation by environmental activists is
designed to prevent or delay oil pipeline construction. Boycotts are also considered to be
coercive tactics to the extent that they impose acute costs on businesses (through lost
revenue) and sometimes involve intimidation and the threat of force to ensure maximum
compliance with the boycott (Umoja 2013, 135–42). Some theorists of civil disobedience
hold that civil disobedients cannot resort to coercion; they can only seek to persuade and
appeal to their opponent’s moral conscience, which excludes confrontational and
coercive tactics (Lefkowitz 2007, 216; Brownlee 2012, 24).
Practitioners and other critics maintain that this dichotomy between non-violent
persuasion and violent coercion is false on the grounds that there is such a thing as ‘non-
violent coercion’, which is furthermore compatible with the goal of moral suasion. Non-
violence appeals to the conscience of the public, by eliciting shame and indignation at the
witnessing of civil disobedients’ suffering and their discipline in the face of violent
repression. After the 1955–56 Montgomery bus boycott, which unleashed spectacular
white retaliatory violence, Martin Luther King, Jr., saw appeals to conscience as
insufficient without disruption and “some form of constructive coercive power” (King
1968, 137). “Nonviolent coercion always brings tension to the surface”, he wrote (ibid.),
affirming “the coercive face of nonviolence” along with its persuasive face (Livingston
2020a, 704; see also Terry 2018, 305). “The purpose of our direct action program,” King
proclaimed in his ‘Letter from a Birmingham Jail’, “is to create a situation so crisis
packed that it will inevitably open the door to negotiation” (King 1991). Non-violent
action is thus the means to the goal of both forcing negotiations – an essential
“mechanism for social change” (Atack 2012, 139) – and of persuading – its corresponding
mechanism for moral and cultural change. This leaves open the question whether
confrontational attacks that single out particular persons through harassment, doxing, and
‘calling out’ are compatible with non-violence. Such acts are coercive and, like verbal
insults, they may be said to inflict psychological violence on the target.
1.2.4 Non-evasion
Civil disobedients are standardly expected to take responsibility for, and accept the legal
consequences of, their lawbreaking. Their evading punishment would make their acts
ordinary crimes or acts of rebellion; their willingness to invite punishment is supposed to
demonstrate their endorsement of the legal system’s legitimacy and their “intense concern
over the issue at hand” (C. Cohen 1966, 6; see also Brownlee 2012 ch. 1; Tai 2017, 146).
Non-evasion is an essential correlate of the conscientiousness and non-violence of civil
disobedience: submitting to law enforcement is part of the dramatic display of suffering
required by non-violence. That said, theorists have fleshed out this requirement of non-
evasion in different ways, arguing variously that the agent must (i) willingly submit to
arrest and prosecution, (ii) plead guilty in court, (iii) not try to defend her crime, and/or
(iv) not complain about the punishment received (Delmas 2019, arguing that only (i) is
necessarily entailed by non-evasion). Some theorists reject (ii) and (iii), proposing instead
that agents plead ‘not guilty’ in court, so as to deny the state’s characterization of the civil
disobedient act as a public wrong (in this view, disobedients should either deny
responsibility of having committed the action as alleged by the prosecutor or admit
responsibility but deny criminal liability) (Moraro 2019, 143–7). Indeed, while the civil
disobedient who pleads ‘guilty’ and does not try to defend her ‘crime’ highlights her
willingness to self-sacrifice, a ‘not guilty’ plea accompanied by a defense of her action
might be more effective at communicating her convictions and persuading others,
including by inviting jury nullification. By contrast, some thinkers reject (i) and (iv) on
the grounds that when civil disobedience is morally justified, the state’s imposition of
punishment is itself problematic and arguably impermissible, so that further protests
against civil disobedients’ arrests, prosecutions, and sentences are justified (Zinn 2002,
27–31). Critics have also noted that punishment can be detrimental to dissenters’ efforts
by compromising future attempts to assist others through protest (Greenawalt 1987, 239)
and that willingness to accept punishment cannot be reasonably expected when agents
know they risk heavy fines or very long sentences for their actions (Scheuerman 2018,
49–51).
1.2.5 Decorum
In some views, being civil means that civil disobedients behave in a dignified and
respectful manner by following the conventional social scripts that spell out displays of
dignity and ways of showing respect in their society. Some theorists understand civility
itself as respect for “minimal civil norms” (Milligan 2013, ch. 2); others count decorum
as an additional, implicit requirement of civility in line with manifestations of self-
restraint (Delmas in Çıdam, et al. 2020, 524–5). Decorum may be understood to prohibit
conduct that would be seen as offensive, insulting, or obscene (with the standards for
each varying widely across cultures). In Scheuerman’s view, Gandhi and King, but not
liberals and democrats, thought that politeness and decorum had a role to play (2018, 11–
31). Yet one reason to think that decorum has seeped into the common understanding of
civil disobedience is that it helps to explain why some protests by Pussy Riot, ACT UP,
and Black Lives Matter, among others, which were conscientious, communicative,
public, non-violent, and non-evasive, were denied the label civil: to wit, because
protesters shouted down their opponents, expressed anger, used offensive language, or
disrespected religious sites (Delmas 2020, 18–9). Critics, however, deny that civil
disobedience needs to be decorous and push back against denials of civility, insofar as
these are often deployed to silence activists (Harcourt 2012; Zerilli 2014). They deem
expressions of anger and offensive or obscene displays to be compatible with civility
(Scheuerman 2019, 5–7; Çıdam, et al. 2020, 517–8) and insist on dissociating the politics
of ‘respectability’ from civil disobedience (Pineda 2021a, 161–3).
3. Justification
The task of defending civil disobedience is commonly undertaken with the assumption
that in reasonably just, liberal societies people have a general moral duty to follow the
law (often called political obligation). It is on the basis of such an assumption that civil
disobedience requires justification. This section examines common understandings of the
problem of disobedience (3.1), before presenting prominent accounts and critiques of the
conditions under which civil disobedience may be justified (3.2). Whether or not theorists
assume that civil disobedience is presumptively impermissible and in need of
justification, their analyses also articulate the value and role of civil disobedience in non-
ideal, nearly just or less-than-nearly-just liberal democracies (3.3).
5. Conclusion
There have been shifts in the paradigm forms and goals of civil disobedience over the
past century, from the suffragettes’ militant activism in pursuit of their basic rights of
citizenship to the youth climate movement’s school walkouts and mass demonstrations
to demand governments take urgent action to combat the climate crisis. Even so, civil
disobedience remains an enduring, vibrant part of political activism and, increasingly,
benefits from transnational alliances.
Theorists have long assumed that civil disobedience only begs justification in liberal,
democratic societies – the best real-world candidates for legitimate states. However, civil
disobedience also raises questions in undemocratic and illegitimate contexts, regarding
its overall role, strategic value, and tactical efficacy. For instance, disobedient protests in
support of democracy in Hong Kong may not be presumptively impermissible given
China’s authoritarian rule. Yet they still beg significant questions concerning the proper
contours of extra-institutional dissident politics and the justification of uncivil and
forceful tactics in repressive contexts, including violence against police and the
destruction of pro-China shops and Chinese banks.
Finally, whereas theorists have tended to think of civil disobedience as generally
undertaken to achieve worthy public goals, liberal democratic states have recently
witnessed much disobedience in pursuit of anti-democratic and illiberal goals, including
conscientious refusal to abide by antidiscrimination statutes and violations of, and
protests against, laws requiring the provision of reproductive services and the public
health measures enacted to slow the spread of the coronavirus. We may need a different
lens than liberal and democratic theorists have offered to evaluate the full range of
conservative social movements, counter-movements, and reactionary movements which
resort to civil (and other forms of) disobedience.
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