The Burdens of Conviction: Brownlee on Civil Disobedience |
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Authors: | William Smith |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Government and Public Administration,The Chinese University of Hong Kong,Shatin,Hong Kong |
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Abstract: | Kimberley Brownlee’s Conscience and Conviction offers a powerful defence of civil disobedience as a conscientious and communicative mode of protest. The overall argument of the book is important and compelling, but this critical commentary explores certain aspects of Brownlee’s view that warrant further consideration and clarification. Those aspects relate to her suggestion that civil disobedience is a dialogic mode of communication, her attempt to ground a moral right of civil disobedience in a principle of humanism, and her belief that the right establishes a defeasible moral claim against all forms of interference. |
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