Resistance movement



         


A resistance movement is a group dedicated to fighting an invader in an occupied country. It can also be any organized effort by supporters of a common goal against a constituted authority. This can include any irregular armed force that rises up against an enforced or established authority, government, or administration. Some resistance movement are underground organization engaged in a struggle for national liberation in a country under military or totalitarian occupation.

The use of the term resistance is politically weighted, as it (and historically, other terms like it) is often used in propaganda used to drum up support in opposition to "foreign intervention." An organization or individuals critical of foreign intervention that supports forms of organized movement (particularly where citizens are affected) tends to favor the term, as well as freedom fighters when with violence, which can be ambiguous terms for describing terrorist actors.

Tactics of resistance movements range from passive resistance and industrial sabotage to what would today be regarded as guerrilla (or guerilla) warfare and terrorism. Resistance movements conduct sabotage and harassment. Contemporary acts of a group that considers itself a resistance movement are usually condemned as terrorism by the government they are directed against, even when such attacks are directed against military targets.

In World War II, many countries had resistance movements dedicated to fighting the German invaders. There was also an anti-Nazi German resistance movement within Germany itself. Although Britain was not invaded in World War II, preparations were made for a British resistance movement in the event of a German invasion.

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Resistance movements

Some were groups of few people, and some may be considered terrorist campaigns by some people:

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Post-World War II

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World War II

Planned resistance movements:

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Pre-20th Century

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Notable individuals in the resistance movements

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See also






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