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'Leaderless Resistance'
The origins of the concept of leaderless resistance in the US are examined. Rather than assert that such strategies emerged during the 1980s, it is contended that this terrorist method developed in conjunction with the National Socialist Liberation Front's (NSLF) emergence during the early 1970s, assessing the role of NSLF leader Joseph Tommasi in the formation of leaderless resistance. However, Ku Klux Klan member Louis R. Beam's (1992) writing on leaderless resistance provided a comprehensive definition of the concept. The subsequent adoption of leaderless resistance by the Odinist movement is discussed. The question of whether Timothy McVeigh's terrorist act in Oklahoma City constitutes an example of leaderless resistance or a call for mass mobilization is also pondered. J. W. Parker
Civil Resistance
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Civil Resistance" published on by Oxford University Press.
Resistance & Assistance
In: Intrinsic Sustainable Development, S. 311-336
Understanding Resistance
In: Promoting Diversity and Social Justice: Educating People from Privileged Groups, S. 61-78
Economic Resistance
In: Western Muslims and the Future of Islam, S. 174-199
Jewish Resistance
In: The Historiography of the Holocaust, S. 341-363
Resistance in Society
In: France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944, S. 475-505
Violent Resistance
In: Radio London and Resistance in Occupied Europe, S. 183-194
Resistance in Europe
In: The Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the Second World War, S. 65-66
Everyday resistance
In: Routledge Handbook of Surveillance Studies
Power and Resistance. Everyday Resistance to Immigration Detention
In: Human Rights, Refugee Protest and Immigration Detention, S. 49-83