A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy

Why have some nonviolent revolutions succeeded even with modest participation numbers, while others have failed despite massive mobilization? We develop an agent-based model that predicts the outcomes of three well-known activism strategies. The first rapidly recruits a wide number of activists, whi...

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Main Authors: Erica Chenoweth, Andrew Hocking, Zoe Marks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2022-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9328538/?tool=EBI
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author Erica Chenoweth
Andrew Hocking
Zoe Marks
author_facet Erica Chenoweth
Andrew Hocking
Zoe Marks
author_sort Erica Chenoweth
collection DOAJ
description Why have some nonviolent revolutions succeeded even with modest participation numbers, while others have failed despite massive mobilization? We develop an agent-based model that predicts the outcomes of three well-known activism strategies. The first rapidly recruits a wide number of activists, which overwhelms the opponent’s support network and encourages large-scale defections. In the second, activists who have already mobilized remain committed to success and inspire other civilians to protest even when they are unable to protest themselves. In the third strategy, campaigns focus their energy and influence directly on the regime’s pillars of support. We find that this third strategy outperforms the others in generating defections, even when the size of the campaign is small. When activists have information about pillars’ levels of loyalty to the regime, they can target persuasion on the pillars most likely to defect. Importantly, for small or medium-sized movements, the strategy of focusing on pillars—especially the least loyal pillars—is more likely to yield success than relying on rapid mobilization and numerical advantage alone.
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spelling doaj.art-838a58ee2f244548abe14104457c40a82022-12-22T00:58:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032022-01-01177A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategyErica ChenowethAndrew HockingZoe MarksWhy have some nonviolent revolutions succeeded even with modest participation numbers, while others have failed despite massive mobilization? We develop an agent-based model that predicts the outcomes of three well-known activism strategies. The first rapidly recruits a wide number of activists, which overwhelms the opponent’s support network and encourages large-scale defections. In the second, activists who have already mobilized remain committed to success and inspire other civilians to protest even when they are unable to protest themselves. In the third strategy, campaigns focus their energy and influence directly on the regime’s pillars of support. We find that this third strategy outperforms the others in generating defections, even when the size of the campaign is small. When activists have information about pillars’ levels of loyalty to the regime, they can target persuasion on the pillars most likely to defect. Importantly, for small or medium-sized movements, the strategy of focusing on pillars—especially the least loyal pillars—is more likely to yield success than relying on rapid mobilization and numerical advantage alone.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9328538/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Erica Chenoweth
Andrew Hocking
Zoe Marks
A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
PLoS ONE
title A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
title_full A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
title_fullStr A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
title_full_unstemmed A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
title_short A dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
title_sort dynamic model of nonviolent resistance strategy
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9328538/?tool=EBI
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