Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS
African American World
Search:
Find what you need on PBS and NPR
Timeline Reference Room Kids Classroom Community Resources
Channels
history
arts & culture
race & society
profiles
Reference Room: Articles A-Z
Best of PBS Best of NPR Articles A-Z Books & Films

Need some good information fast on African American history? We've got what you're looking for with our selection of more than 300 reference articles.

Article provided by: Encyclopaedia Britannica



Sit-In Encyclopedia Britannica
A tactic of nonviolent civil disobedience. The demonstrators enter a business or a public place and remain seated until forcibly evicted or until their grievances are answered. Attempts to terminate the essentially passive sit-in often appear brutal, thus arousing sympathy for the demonstrators among moderates and noninvolved individuals. Following Mahatma Gandhi's teaching, Indians employed the sit-in to great advantage during their struggle for independence from the British. Later, the sit-in was adopted as a major tactic in the civil-rights struggle of American blacks; the first prominent sit-in occurred at a Greensboro (North Carolina) lunch counter in 1960. Student activists adopted the tactic later in the decade in demonstrations against the Vietnam War.

A tactic similar to the sit-in, the sit-down, has been used by unions to occupy plants of companies that were being struck. The sit-down was first used on a large scale in the United States during the United Automobile Workers' strike against the General Motors Corporation in 1937. See also civil disobedience.

Copyright © 2002 Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.





return to articles A-Z



feedback privacy policy credits site map pledge