Student occupations of inner London department stores, barricades at Dale Farm, camps outside the Stock Exchange, and even the summer’s riots show that civil disobedience in the UK is on the rise. But are we witnessing a new kind ‘performance protest’? Charlie Beckett argues that these protests are now more focused on media reaction, such that they are more like performance art, often with little cohesion, programme, or objectives
UK students’ desire to create disruptive, media-friendly ‘events’ during the 2010-11 protests agains...
How can one be insurgent when overt protest is stifled or ignored? How does one rebel against a cult...
The Occupy Movement represents the evolving nature of contemporary social movements. It employs trad...
Is political protest turning into a ritual performance? And if so, is it a product of media saturati...
2011 has seen the streets of London dramatically occupied, first with the riots and looting that str...
Should you blame the media if your demo doesn’t work? Charlie Beckett takes a look at Saturday’s pro...
This is a response to my blog about media and protests by my colleague Dr Bart Cammaerts, who specia...
On the 17th October, over 20,000 people marched on Parliament Square in London. Why do people take t...
Radical forms of direct action and protest have undertaken a new cycle in the past three years. Clim...
This piece follows two demonstrations from London and Los Angeles. A decade apart, the protests are ...
The first year of the coalition has been marked by protests and marches that have, on occasions, spi...
Articulating Dissent analyses the new communicative strategies of coalition protest movements and ho...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
Starting off from its conflicting range of connotations – from the pejorative to the efficacious – t...
Those on yesterday’s student fees protest march were often angry to find that their largely peaceful...
UK students’ desire to create disruptive, media-friendly ‘events’ during the 2010-11 protests agains...
How can one be insurgent when overt protest is stifled or ignored? How does one rebel against a cult...
The Occupy Movement represents the evolving nature of contemporary social movements. It employs trad...
Is political protest turning into a ritual performance? And if so, is it a product of media saturati...
2011 has seen the streets of London dramatically occupied, first with the riots and looting that str...
Should you blame the media if your demo doesn’t work? Charlie Beckett takes a look at Saturday’s pro...
This is a response to my blog about media and protests by my colleague Dr Bart Cammaerts, who specia...
On the 17th October, over 20,000 people marched on Parliament Square in London. Why do people take t...
Radical forms of direct action and protest have undertaken a new cycle in the past three years. Clim...
This piece follows two demonstrations from London and Los Angeles. A decade apart, the protests are ...
The first year of the coalition has been marked by protests and marches that have, on occasions, spi...
Articulating Dissent analyses the new communicative strategies of coalition protest movements and ho...
This thesis analyses the media coverage and dominant institution responses to the media and protest ...
Starting off from its conflicting range of connotations – from the pejorative to the efficacious – t...
Those on yesterday’s student fees protest march were often angry to find that their largely peaceful...
UK students’ desire to create disruptive, media-friendly ‘events’ during the 2010-11 protests agains...
How can one be insurgent when overt protest is stifled or ignored? How does one rebel against a cult...
The Occupy Movement represents the evolving nature of contemporary social movements. It employs trad...