Politikon (Mar 2015)

Lefkowitz, Disobedience and Political Authority

  • Shannon Davis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.26.4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26

Abstract

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This paper examines political philosopher David Lefkowitiz’s (2007) framework of public disobedience and argues that the acts of civil disobedience employed in the nonviolent Moral Monday protests held at the State Legislative building in the city of Raleigh, North Carolina (United States) during the summer of 2013, are consistent with his account. By definition, public disobedience is a “suitably constrained form of civil disobedience,” compatible with political authority, or a legitimate state's right to rule, because citizens are recognized as holding a moral right to engage in such acts. Specifically, I argue that North Carolina's Moral Mondays activism is a paradigmatic instance of civil, nonviolent resistance by demonstrating how the protests satisfy three necessary conditions of civil disobedience that are also present in Lefkowitz's framework. In my final analysis, I conclude that Moral Mondays are distinguishable from forthright, lawless acts of dissidence that undermine rather than safeguard political authority.

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