Revolution has long been understood as a legitimate means of deep political and social transformation. From the French and Russian Revolutions to the anti-colonial struggles of the twentieth century, revolutionary change has historically rested on popular participation, moral purpose, and an openly declared commitment to collective emancipation. In contemporary political discourse, however, the term “revolution” is increasingly stretched, diluted, and strategically misused, often to legitimize opaque processes of regime change, elite rivalry, or externally influenced political disruption. Such conceptual slippage weakens democratic accountability and distorts historical truth. This article proposes a clear normative and empirical distinction between genuine people’s revolutions, elite-engineered regime change, and conspiratorial disruptions that present themselves as popular movements. iIt argues that authentic revolutions are fundamentally for the people and by the people, grounded in informed consent and articulated objectives from the outset. Transparency of purpose is not merely an ethical virtue; it is a democratic necessity that allows citizens to knowingly support, resist, or withdraw from political action. Movements that mobilize public sentiment through ambiguity, deception, or manufactured disorder, while advancing narrow or concealed interests, cannot be credibly described as revolutions. They are, instead, conspiracies against popular sovereignty./i Drawing on comparative historical analysis, the article examines the French Revolution (1789), the Russian Revolution (1917), the Indian independence movement, and selected twentieth-century revolutionary transformations, with reference to patterns of mass mobilization, political legitimacy, and institutional outcomes. Particular emphasis is placed on Bangladesh’s Liberation War of 1971, examined as a paradigmatic people’s revolution shaped by more than two decades (1947-1971) of political struggle, cultural resistance, electoral mandates, and sustained mass consciousness. This historically grounded process is contrasted with contemporary claims of “instant” or spontaneous revolutions that lack comparable preparation, organizational depth, or transparent popular authorization. The article concludes that revolutions detached from historical truth, popular consent, and ethical clarity are unlikely to endure. Sustainable revolutionary change must emerge from people’s lived realities, collective memory, and an openly stated commitment to rights, justice, and sovereignty.
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Zahurul Alam
Journal of Public Policy and Administration
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Zahurul Alam (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893626c1944d70ce0468a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jppa.20261002.13