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There are few movements that are completely violent or nonviolent. There isn’t really any scholarly consensus on whether a radical violent flank actually helps the “core” nonviolent group, or under which circumstances it helps the group. I recommend reading “Why Civil Resistance Works” by Erica Chenoweth for an overview of the factors that lead to the success (or failure) of resistance as well as more concrete examples.
The numbers speak for themselves - violent resistance can succeed, but nonviolent resistance is more likely to succeed. The key finding from Chenoweth’s review of resistance movements between 1900-2006 is that the strongest determining factor in whether a resistance is successful is the percentage of the populace actively involved in resisting. This seems like a “water is wet” finding, but consider the difficulties in recruiting members to violent resistance (training involved, physical ability barriers, moral barriers, informational barriers - hard to advertise for recruits without informing on yourself, etc.) vs nonviolent resistance (almost no training necessary, easy to inform about time/place, fewer physical ability barriers, etc.)
Here’s the full passage about flank effects:
Thank you! I believe I read about this, or something in a similar vein a few months ago, and that is what caused me to ask my question. I’d have to do more digging and research on the subject, and I appreciate your response