Ignoring the complexity of what constitutes violence is where the (non)violent thought and praxis represented by white liberal Christians in the United States falls short. In this book twelve scholar-activist interviewees share perspectives and effective practices that destabilize traditional rationalizations of violence including those from the institutions and practices of a dominant Christian theology. The author calls on communities committed to (non)violence to invest in a model for social change which:1) ROOTS ITSELF IN CONTEXTUAL HISTORICAL ANALYSIS;2) INCLUDES OTHER-THAN-HUMAN LIVES AS NECESSARY PARTNERS;3) VALUES PRACTICES THAT DISMANTLE VIOLENCE OVER THEOLOGICAL ABSTRACTIONS;4) EMPHASIZES CREATIVE COMMUNITIES OF ACTIVE COUNTER-CULTURAL RESISTANCE OVER INDIVIDUALISM;5) EXPERIMENTS WITH DIVERSE DISRUPTIVE TACTICS; AND6) URGES A SELF-CRITICAL SOLIDARITY THAT WELCOMES DIFFERENCES REGARDING VARIOUS MEANS OF SOCIAL CHANGE.The Interviewees: Rita Bo Brown (B♀) Ward Churchill John Dear Vincent Harding Dolores Huerta Derrick Jensen Kathy Kelly Alice Lynd Staughton Lynd Katherine Power Sarah Schulman Akinyele Umoja