Change Management for Effective Institutions
... Change programmes, as with many initiatives, often suffer from an inability to translate effectively to implementation. Enthusiasm for reform is often focused at the policy and planning level and initial stages, but fails to follow through. The literature is much stronger on strategy than it is on e ...
... Change programmes, as with many initiatives, often suffer from an inability to translate effectively to implementation. Enthusiasm for reform is often focused at the policy and planning level and initial stages, but fails to follow through. The literature is much stronger on strategy than it is on e ...
A Marx for the Left Today: Interview with Marcello
... volumes II and III of Capital, but also spent a lot of time and energy, during the last agitated part of his life, rewriting and updating many parts of the first volume of Capital). The point is that today, in the small (compared to few decades ago) political parties and social movements that still ...
... volumes II and III of Capital, but also spent a lot of time and energy, during the last agitated part of his life, rewriting and updating many parts of the first volume of Capital). The point is that today, in the small (compared to few decades ago) political parties and social movements that still ...
Rebellion
Rebellion, uprising, or insurrection is a refusal of obedience or order. It may, therefore, be seen as encompassing a range of behaviors aimed at destroying or taking over the position of an established authority such as a government, governor, president, political leader, financial institution, or person in charge. On the one hand the forms of behaviour can include non-violent methods such as the (overlapping but not quite identical) phenomena of civil disobedience, civil resistance and nonviolent resistance. On the other hand, it may encompass violent campaigns. Those who participate in rebellions, especially if they are armed rebellions, are known as ""rebels"".Throughout history, many different groups that opposed their governments have been called rebels. Over 450 peasant revolts erupted in southwestern France between 1590 and 1715. In the United States, the term was used for the Continentals by the British in the Revolutionary War, and for the Confederacy by the Union in the American Civil War. Most armed rebellions have not been against authority in general, but rather have sought to establish a new government in their place. For example, the Boxer Rebellion sought to implement a stronger government in China in place of the weak and divided government of the time. The Jacobite Risings (called ""Jacobite Rebellions"" by the government) attempted to restore the deposed Stuart kings to the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland, rather than abolish the monarchy completely.