Could the great recession lead to a great revolution? |…

    Historians frequently view revolutions as extraordinary and unanticipated interruptions of state social regulation of everyday life.

    This isn't the case.

    In my work as editor of a new encyclopedia of revolution and protest, I've reviewed 500 years' worth of revolutionary actions. And the surprising pattern I've found is the regularity of volatile and explosive conflicts, commonly revealed as waves of protest from within civil society to confront persistent inequality and oppression. While historians cannot forecast the time and place of revolutions, the past has a sustained, if disjointed, record of popular resistance to injustice.

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