
The Program on
Nonviolent Sanctions and Cultural Survival
is a research program within the Weatherhead
Center for International Affairs at Harvard
University. The nonviolent sanctions component
of the Program evolved from the pioneering
work of former Weatherhead Center Associate
Gene Sharp, who articulated a seemingly simple
premise about the nature of political power
- that it is rooted in and continually dependent
upon cooperation and obedience, and that this
cooperation and obedience can be withdrawn.
Since January1995 the Program has been directed
by Professor of Anthropology David Maybury-Lewis.
The Program under his direction formally links
two complementary strands of Harvard-based
research, each spanning nearly three decades.
In
1972, Professor Maybury-Lewis founded Cultural
Survival, a human rights organization which
focuses on the situation of ethnic minorities
and indigenous peoples worldwide. The Cultural
Survival Center, the formal research wing
of Cultural Survival, and the former Program
on Nonviolent Sanctions were formally merged
in January 1995 to consider the problems of
dictatorship, war, terrorism, genocide, and
oppression in the complex context of cultures
and events that form the backdrop of many
ongoing conflicts. The combined Program, therefore,
is ideally situated and organized to address
nonviolent alternatives for the preservation
of all peoples and their cultures.
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