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Sit-ins - 2 dictionary results
sit-in   (sĭt'ĭn')
n.  
  1. An organized protest demonstration in which participants seat themselves in an appropriate place and refuse to move.
  2. The act of occupying the seats or an area of a segregated establishment to protest racial discrimination.

sit-ins

A form of nonviolent protest, employed during the 1960s in the civil rights movement and later in the movement against the Vietnam War. In a sit-in, demonstrators occupy a place open to the public, such as a racially segregated (see segregation) lunch counter or bus station, and then refuse to leave. Sit-ins were designed to provoke arrest and thereby gain attention for the demonstrators' cause.

Note: The civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., defended such tactics as sit-ins in his “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”

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