Categories: Criminal Law Constitutional Law
Instructor(s)
Braver, JoshuaCourse Data
Room 3247
M 3:30pm-5:30pm
Pass/Fail: Yes
Past Grade Distributions (Fall '22 and onward)
Fall 2022
Course Description
Law and Theory of Civil Disobedience, Strikes, and "Riots"
Revolutions are violent overthrows of a system of government. At the other end of the continuum are reforms which seek to use legal avenues to shore up or fix defects in a system while still leaving its essential features intact. What may lie between these two extremes? What other modes of political change and agitation exist?
We explore the political tactics of civil disobedience, strikes and "riots." Among the questions we will ask are the following: When does the law permit and how does the law regulate each of these modes? Is this legal regulation fair or just? When are these tactics legitimate or productive? Is there a way to break the law that still pays respect to it? Are these tactics revolutionary or reformist or neither? We will work through a wide variety of legal, historical, and theoretical texts.