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Stories of the nonviolent resistance

A podcast from the Regional Institute on the Study and Practice of Strategic Nonviolent Action in the Americas.

Home > Season 3

Episode 10– How  to  influence public  policies  in favor of women?

Mariela Arce is a Panamanian researcher and human rights activist. We talked with her about the Women, Development, and Equality Pact, which has been in effect for over 30 years. How did nonviolent strategies influence normative and institutional design for women in Panama? Don’t miss this episode of the Nonviolent Resistance Stories podcast.

Episode 9 – Bolivia: Nonviolent Actions Against Mining Exploitation                                                                                                              

María Francesca Rodríguez is a researcher and professor at the Universidad Andrés Bello in Chile. She explains her research on the case study of three civil resistance campaigns against mining exploitation that took place between 1980 and 2020 in Bolivia. What were these campaigns about? What role did women play in these nonviolent actions? What level of success did these campaigns achieve?

Episode 8– How did nonviolent actions promote peace in Colombia?

In the late 1990s, during a time of escalating violence in the internal armed conflict, various actors from civil society organized to promote peace. What were the nonviolent actions and strategies implemented? Mauricio García, a renowned researcher on peace in Colombia, provided this interview.

Episode 7 – How  did  conscientious  objection  develop  in  Spain?                                                                                                              

Pepe Beunza was a conscientious objector, meaning he refused to perform compulsory military service during Franco’s regime. Martí Olivalle is one as well. Both participated in the program to discuss the origins of this movement in Spain and the nonviolent actions undertaken now that military service is no longer mandatory.

Episode 6 – Panama: A Nonviolent Protest for Nature

Guido Berguido, Executive Director of Adopta Bosque, tells us about the social protests that took place in Panama in late 2023. These were unprecedented socio-environmental protests against a mega-mining project set to operate in one of the country’s most biodiverse areas, the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor.

Episode 5–Indigenous Councils in Colombia

Fernando Quinayas is the governor of the Wairari Atun Sacha indigenous council, located in the Cauca department of Colombia. He tells us about the nonviolent actions and strategies they implement through their autonomous organizational forms, particularly against the violent practices of mining extractivism.

Episode 4 – A Nonviolent Approach to Indigenous Protests in Ecuador

In the state of Michoacán, Mexico, the so-called “war on drugs” (militarization) began. The levels of violence are extremely complex. Edgar Guerra, a Mexican researcher, explains the society’s responses to violence and crime from a cultural perspective.

Episode 3 – Cultural Activism as a Nonviolent Response in  Mexico

In the state of Michoacán, Mexico, the so-called “war on drugs” (militarization) began. The levels of violence are extremely complex. Edgar Guerra, a Mexican researcher, explains the society’s responses to violence and crime from a cultural perspective.

Episode 2– Catuche: The Story of the Coexistence Commissions in Venezuela

The Venezuelan sociologist, Verónica Zubillaga, has been conducting field research on various forms of violence for twenty years. She shares with us what happened in Catuche, a neighborhood in Caracas, Venezuela. There, the community and armed youth in conflict established agreements. What were these agreements about?

Episode 1 – Las Tejedoras de Vida                                                  (Weavers of Life)

In the state of Michoacán, Mexico, the so-called “war on drugs” (militarization) began. The levels of violence are extremely complex. Edgar Guerra, a Mexican researcher, explains the society’s responses to violence and crime from a cultural perspective.