Erica Chenoweth
Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment
The Ash Center examines how civil resistance harnesses nonviolent collective action to challenge injustice, drive democratic change, and inform research on strengthening institutions and promoting accountability.
Civil resistance refers to the use of nonviolent methods—such as protests, strikes, boycotts, and organized noncooperation—to challenge injustice, defend rights, and advance democratic change. Grounded in collective action and strategic organization, civil resistance movements have shaped political and social transformations across the globe.
Our scholars research on civil resistance explore how civic mobilization strengthens institutions, promotes accountability, and contributes to more inclusive and resilient democracies.
Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment
Lecturer in Public Policy
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Lead Research Fellow for the Nonviolent Action Lab, AY2025-2026
Research Project Manager, Nonviolent Action Lab
Research Associate, Crowd Counting Consortium
Commentary
For the past three legislative cycles, state lawmakers have tabled record numbers of bills that harmfully target LGBTQ+ people or seek to enforce chauvinistic ideas about sexuality and gender norms.
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CCC logged more than 13,400 left-wing protests across more than 2,000 different U.S. cities and towns
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CCC logged more than 5,700 right-wing events in 2022
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This is a guest post by Mason Holland, an undergraduate student at the University of Connecticut majoring in Political Science. He also serves as President of the Student Body.
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Video
In this discussion, Ash Center Democracy Postdoctoral Fellow Johnnie Lotesta talked with leaders from the environmental justice, gun violence prevention, labor, and immigration movements about how they balanced these commitments in the course of their work.
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The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation hosted a book talk on Prisms of the People: Power & Organizing in Twenty-First-Century America with co-authors Elizabeth McKenna and Michelle Oyakawa.
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So far, the Crowd Counting Consortium has logged just over 5,300 events since Biden’s inauguration on January 20, 2021.
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The Crowd Counting Consortium recorded more than 1,800 protest events in the U.S. in March 2021, with roughly 88,000 to 125,000 participants in the events.
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Since the Atlanta-area murders, we have logged 126 events focused on this issue, most of them this past Saturday and Sunday, March 20–21.