Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
The University of Brighton Home
Home
Profiles
Research units
Equipment
Projects
Research output
Activities
Student theses
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Does XR’s Lawbreaking Challenge or Uphold State Injustices?
Francesca Kilpatrick
Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics and Ethics
Doctoral College
Research output
:
Contribution to conference
›
Paper
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Does XR’s Lawbreaking Challenge or Uphold State Injustices?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Justice
100%
Uphold
100%
Climate Justice
100%
Civil Disobedience
100%
Lawbreaking
100%
Disability
50%
High Profile
50%
Citizenship
50%
Denying
50%
Ordinary People
50%
Marginalized Groups
50%
Existing System
50%
Climate Activism
50%
State Power
50%
Institutional Power
50%
Justice Theory
50%
Environmental Activists
50%
Systemic Inequality
50%
Climate Activists
50%
Law-abiding
50%
Fridays for Future
50%
Good Law
50%
Campaign Rhetoric
50%
Campaign Strategy
50%
Arts and Humanities
Discourse
100%
Injustice
100%
Disobedience
100%
Universalist
100%
Criticism
50%
Action
50%
Framing
50%
Stereotypes
50%
State power
50%
Social Sciences
Justice
100%
Civil Disobedience
50%
Stereotypes
25%