Introduction: The opportunities and challenges of revolutionary nonviolence today - Richard Jackson, Joe Llewellyn, Griffin Leonard, Aidan Gnoth and Tonga Karena
1. A defence of revolutionary nonviolence - Richard Jackson
2. Listen, Leftist! Violence is not revolutionary - Joseph Llewellyn
3. Symbolic nonviolence and the transformation of society beyond liberal capitalism - Timothy Bryar
4. Eradicating warism: Our most dangerous disease - Duane L. Cady
5. Social defence: A revolutionary agenda - Brian Martin
6. One No against violence, many Yeses beyond violence: Zapatista dignity, autonomy, counter-conduct - Sean Chabot & Stellan Vinthagen
7. Rethinking nonviolence and (de)legitimacy: BDS and the formal Palestinian political process - Philippa Barnes
8. Grassroots media as strategic resistance - Isabel McIntosh
9. Wiremu Patene and the early peace movement at Karakariki - Anaru Eketone
10. Reclaiming the role of Rongo: A revolutionary and radical form of non-violent politics - Tonga Karena
11. Understanding Baxter’s ‘Dunedin lawyer’: Alfred Richard Barclay and the significance of Boer War opposition in New Zealand - Tim Leadbeater