Civil-disobedience

/ˈsɪvəl dɪsəˈbiːdiəns/ noun

The deliberate, public refusal to obey certain laws or government demands as a form of peaceful political protest. Practitioners willingly accept legal punishment to highlight the injustice of particular laws or policies.

Popularized by American philosopher Henry David Thoreau in his 1849 essay of the same name, though he initially called it 'resistance to civil government.' The concept draws from earlier ideas about natural law and moral obligation superseding human-made laws.

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