1. Global strategies
  2. Refusing to eat

Refusing to eat

  • Hunger strike
  • Fasting as protest
  • Hunger striking
  • Self-starvation

Description

Refusing to eat in order to bring pressure to bear on other individuals or institutions, either to recognize the justice of a cause, the injustice of a social group of government or to liberate the person fasting from prison. The hunger strike is thus normally used to protest at the individual's own condition or the social or moral condition of others. The intent is that public knowledge of the hunger strike will humiliate others or bring attention to grievances.

Implementation

The hunger strike probably was first used by exiles and political prisoners of Czarist Russia, and is still used by prisoners of conscience in the former USSR and elsewhere to draw attention to their cause. It was used by English and American suffragettes. Gandhi used it as an act of penance for the failures of his followers, as a protest against English authority and as a way of forcing the Indian people to accept his proposals. Several IRA prisoners in Northern Ireland have used hunger strikes for political purposes, even starving to death.

Counter-claim

Self-starvation leaves to others the responsibility of actually making the change happen and is therefore futile.

Broader

Protesting
Presentable
Fasting
Presentable
Using hunger
Yet to rate

Facilitates

Striking
Presentable

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero HungerSustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-beingSustainable Development Goal #8: Decent Work and Economic Growth

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
  • Social activity » Employment conditions » Employment conditions
  • Amenities » Undernourishment
  • Health care » Nutrition
  • Individuation » Individuation
  • Content quality
    Yet to rate
     Yet to rate
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Dec 3, 2024