Nonviolent Resistance as a Strategy for Social Change in the Life of Martin Luther King, Jr |
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1See 2See 3See achieve Alabama Albany Albany Movement American arrested Atlanta Baptist Church Bennett Birmingham black church black citizens black community Boston University bus boycott buses Chicago Christian Interpretation civil disobedience civil rights movement commitment conflict confrontations Conquest by Suffering Conquest of Violence Coretta Scott King Court Critical Biography David David L demonstrations desegregation Dexter Avenue economic effective efforts evil force freedom rides Gandhi goals groups ibid injustice jail justice King recognized leaders leadership Lewis Martin Luther King mass meetings means method Miller Montgomery boycott Montgomery bus boycott moral Morehouse College NAACP negotiations Negro church Negro Revolution Niebuhr non-cooperation nonviolent action nonviolent campaign nonviolent movement nonviolent resistance opponent participation pastor persuasion philosophy of nonviolent principle protest march racial Rauschenbusch Revolution SCLC self-suffering Selma Seminary sit-ins SNCC social change South Stride toward Freedom struggle tactics technique Theological Thoreau tion truth unjust violent resistance voters York