Property Disobedience as Protest Property Disobedience as Protest
Democracy, Citizenship, and Constitutionalism

Property Disobedience as Protest

Rethinking Political Nonviolence

    • $49.99
    • $49.99

Publisher Description

William E. Scheuerman’s book explores when, if ever, politically motivated property harms are justifiable

In 2020, Black Lives Matter activists toppled Confederate monuments and occasionally vandalized police vehicles and stations. Climate activists have damaged natural gas pipelines and famous artworks. In Hong Kong, pro-democracy students targeted businesses sympathetic to the mainland government. On January 6, 2021, far-right groups at the US Capitol mistreated public and private property as part of their efforts to disrupt finalizing election results. Property damage constitutes an increasingly commonplace feature of global political protest. How then to interpret and evaluate its proliferation? The media regularly describes such acts as “violent,” as do most scholars. However, William E. Scheuerman’s book pushes back against conflating politically motivated violations of property rights with violence. Political violence has no place in democratic politics. Yet indiscriminately grouping property damage together with acts destructive of and harmful to persons is conceptually confusing and politically misleading. After all, Americans celebrate the Boston Tea Party. So why do most of us now categorically condemn many seemingly parallel acts?

Scheuerman tackles challenging and politically timely questions. When, if ever, are politically motivated property harms justifiable? What standards should we expect of those pursuing them to meet, under democratic conditions? How are those standards undermined by the rise of authoritarian populism around the world? Focusing on identifiably nonviolent varieties of what Scheuerman calls property disobedience, his book explores a variety of real-life examples, both past and present, to understand how and why such acts may be politically justifiable—or should instead be viewed as beyond the pale.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2026
January 6
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
SELLER
Lightning Source, LLC
SIZE
1.2
MB
Morgenthau Morgenthau
2013
The End of Law The End of Law
2019
The Rule of Law Under Siege The Rule of Law Under Siege
2023
Liberal Democracy and the Social Acceleration of Time Liberal Democracy and the Social Acceleration of Time
2020
Desobediencia civil Desobediencia civil
2019
Civil Disobedience Civil Disobedience
2018
Beyond Checks and Balances Beyond Checks and Balances
2026
Keeping Our Enemies Closer Keeping Our Enemies Closer
2026
Democratic Failures and the Ethics of Democracy Democratic Failures and the Ethics of Democracy
2024
Dignity Rights Dignity Rights
2020
Modern Constitutions Modern Constitutions
2020
Digital Media and Democratic Futures Digital Media and Democratic Futures
2019