Sharp, Gene (Personal Name)
- Shārb, Jīn
- Śārpa, Jīna
- Shārp, Jīn
- شارب، جين
- شارپ، جين
- Earlier heading: Sharp, Gene Elmer
Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project.
Non-Latin script references not evaluated.
His Gandhi faces the storm, 1961.
His National security through civilian-based defense, c1985: CIP t.p. (Gene Sharp, Program on Nonviolent Sanctions in Conflict and Defense, Center for International Affairs, Harvard Univ., prof. of pol. sci. and sociology, Southeastern Massachusetts Univ.) data sheet (b. 1/21/28)
His al-Muqāwamah al-lā-ʻunfīyah, 1986: t.p. (Jīn Shārb)
Tshe ba spaṅs paʼi thab rtsod kyi nus śugs daṅ ñams len, 1999: t.p. (Jīna Śārpa)
Jāmiʻah-yi madanī, mubārazah-yi madanī, 2007 or 2008: t.p. (جين شارپ = Jīn Shārp) t.p. verso (Iranian CIP data: Shārp, Jīn; b. 1928)
Non-violence, 1951: title page (Gene Elmer Sharp)
Gene Sharp, a scholar and onetime conscientious objector who wrote penetratingly about civil disobedience, was often called "the Machiavelli of nonviolence" and who became an influential backstage figure in international peace movements from Serbia to Egypt, died Jan. 28 at his home in Boston; he was 90; the death was confirmed by Jamila Raqib, executive director of the Albert Einstein Institution, a Boston-based nonprofit organization Dr. Sharp founded in 1983 to advance "the study and use of strategic nonviolent action in conflicts throughout the world"; Gene Elmer Sharp was born Jan. 21, 1928, in North Baltimore, Ohio; 1949 graduate of Ohio State University, where he also received a master's degree in sociology in 1951; received a doctorate in political theory from the University of Oxford in 1968; taught political science and sociology at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, among other colleges)