29.
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30.
The student leaders managed the protest to go peacefully. Why?
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City University of Hong Kong students staging a sit-in during 2014 Hong Kong protests over blocking of electoral reforms

Students demonstrating against university privatization in Athens, Greece, 2007

Shimer College students protesting threatened changes to the school's democratic governance, 2010

Tufts University students demonstrating for disinvestment from fossil fuels, 2013
Student activism or campus activism is work by students to cause political, environmental, economic, or social change. Although often focused on schools, curriculum, and educational funding, student groups have influenced greater political events.[1]
Modern student activist movements vary widely in subject, size, and success, with all kinds of students in all kinds of educational settings participating, including public and private school students; elementary, middle, senior, undergraduate, and graduate students; and all races, socio-economic backgrounds, and political perspectives.[2] Some student protests focus on the internal affairs of a specific institution; others focus on broader issues such as a war or dictatorship. Likewise, some student protests focus on an institution's impact on the world, such as a disinvestment campaign, while others may focus on a regional or national policy's impact on the institution, such as a campaign against government education policy. Although student activism is commonly associated with left-wing politics, right-wing student movements are not uncommon; for example, large student movements fought on both sides of the apartheid struggle in South Africa.[3]
Student activism at the university level is nearly as old as the university itself. Students in Paris and Bologna staged collective actions as early as the 13th century, chiefly over town and gown issues.[4] Student protests over broader political issues also have a long pedigree. In Joseon Dynasty Korea, 150 Sungkyunkwan students staged an unprecedented remonstration against the king in 1519 over the Kimyo purge.[5]
Extreme forms of student activism include suicide such as the case of Jan Palach's,[6] and Jan Zajíc's protests against the end of the Prague Spring[7] and Kostas Georgakis' protest against the Greek military junta of 1967–
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