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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The director of the International Center on
Nonviolent Conflict and executive producer of the Emmy-nominated
Public Broadcasting Service television series “A Force More
Powerful” will lead a Nov. 25 film screening and discussion
at The University of Alabama on the power of nonviolent resistance
to thwart and overthrow dictators.
The 7 p.m. session, held in UA’s ten Hoor Hall, room 30,
and entitled “A Force More Powerful: Non-Violent Action and
Regime Change,” will be led by Jack DuVall, a former PBS producer
and director of the International Center for Non-Violent Conflict,
and Dr. Scott O’Bryan, assistant professor of history in UA’s
College of Arts and Sciences.
Following the screening of the award-winning PBS documentary “Bringing
Down a Dictator,” DuVall and O’Bryan will lead a discussion
on successful cases of civilian-led nonviolent insurrections against
dictators, and the potential for such nonviolent action against
Iraq.
The event is sponsored by the department
of history, the Blount
Undergraduate Initiative, UA’s Asian
studies program and its department
of religious studies.
DuVall is a television executive and veteran writer who is also
co-author of a companion book that shares a name with the PBS series.
For 16 years DuVall has helped develop, market, executive-produce
and promote non-fiction television programming for past clients
including the Turner Broadcasting System, The Learning Channel,
KCET/Los Angeles, the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, The Christian
Science Monitor and more than 30 other commercial television and
non-profit organizations.
His writing includes speeches for presidential candidates in four
national campaigns and poems and articles that have appeared in
literary journals and major newspapers.
For more information on the television series, see the PBS web
site www.pbs.org/weta/forcemorepowerful/.
For more information on the documentary, “Bringing Down a
Dictator”see www.pbs.org/weta/dictator/.
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