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A Duty to Resist: When Disobedience Should Be Uncivil

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What are our responsibilities in the face of injustice? How far should we go to fight it? Many would argue that as long as a state is nearly just, citizens have a moral duty to obey the law. Proponents of civil disobedience generally hold that, given this moral duty, a person needs a solid justification to break the law. But activists from Henry David Thoreau and Mohandas Gandhi to the Movement for Black Lives have long recognized that there are times when, rather than having a duty to obey the law, we have a duty to disobey it.


Taking seriously the history of this activism, A Duty to Resist wrestles with the problem of political obligation in real world societies that harbor injustice. Candice Delmas argues that the duty of justice, the principle of fairness, the Samaritan duty, and political association impose responsibility to resist under conditions of injustice. We must expand political obligation to include a duty to resist unjust laws and social conditions even in legitimate states.


For Delmas, this duty to resist demands principled disobedience, and such disobedience need not always be civil. At times, covert, violent, evasive, or offensive acts of lawbreaking can be justified, even required. Delmas defends the viability and necessity of illegal assistance to undocumented migrants, leaks of classified information, distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, sabotage, armed self-defense, guerrilla art, and other modes of resistance. There are limits: principle alone does not justify law breaking. But uncivil disobedience can sometimes be not only permissible but required in the effort to resist injustice.

Author: Delmas Candice
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 312
ISBN: 9780197531310
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2020

Preface to the paperback edition

Introduction: Political Obligation(s)

Chapter 1. Principled Disobedience

Chapter 2. In Defense of Uncivil Disobedience

Chapter 3. Justice and Democracy

Chapter 4. Fairness

Chapter 5. Samaritanism

Chapter 6. Political Association and Dignity

Chapter 7. Acting on Political Obligations

Conclusion

Postscript. Resistance in the Age of Trump

Candice Delmas is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Political Science at Northeastern University and the Associate Director of the Politics, Philosophy, and Economics Program. She previously served as a Dworkin-Balzan Fellow at New York University School of Law from 2016 to 2017. She works in moral, social, political, and legal philosophy.

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