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Democracy & Government

Protest and Civil Disobedience

How people throughout history have challenged unjust laws and pushed for change through protest and deliberate law-breaking. When is resistance right? What makes it work? And what does it cost?

Core Ideas
1 Speaking up when something is wrong takes courage
2 People have changed the world by refusing to accept unfair things
3 Some rules have been bad, and good people have broken them
4 Peaceful action is usually stronger than anger
5 Many voices together are more powerful than one alone
Background for Teachers

Young children have a strong sense of fairness. They notice when something is wrong and often want to do something about it. This is the foundation of protest — the belief that unfair things can and should be changed. At this age, the goal is to plant a few simple ideas. Sometimes adults break the law, but for a good reason — to change a law that was itself wrong. Some of the biggest changes in history happened because ordinary people refused to accept unfair treatment. And peaceful, non-violent action — standing up without hurting anyone — is usually stronger than fighting. Children do not need to learn specific protest techniques. They need the foundation that speaking up for what is right is brave, good, and an important part of being a citizen. Handle with care. Do not glorify breaking rules for no reason. The point is not rebellion but conscience — refusing to accept unfairness. Be aware that some children's families may have direct experience of protest or activism. No materials are needed.

Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — Speaking up when something is wrong
PurposeChildren understand that noticing unfairness and speaking up is an important habit.
How to run itAsk: have you ever seen something unfair at school or at home? Collect gentle answers. Someone being left out. A rule that did not feel right. Someone being treated less kindly than others. Discuss: what do people do when they see something unfair? Some say nothing. They do not want trouble. Some go along, even if they know it is wrong. Some speak up. They say 'that is not fair' or ask why, or tell a trusted grown-up. Speaking up is hard. Sometimes people laugh at you. Sometimes they ignore you. Sometimes you are the only one noticing. But speaking up about unfairness is one of the most important things people can do. History is full of changes that happened because someone — often many someones — refused to stay silent. Some were grown-ups. Some were children. Tell a simple example. A long time ago in the United States, there were laws that said Black children and white children could not go to the same schools, sit in the same places on buses, or eat in the same restaurants. These laws were unfair. Many people knew they were unfair. Some of them — Black and white, grown-ups and children — refused to accept these laws. They spoke up. They marched. They asked why. They broke some of the unfair laws to show everyone how wrong they were. Over time, the laws changed. The United States became (slowly, imperfectly) a fairer place. The people who spoke up are now remembered as heroes. Finish with a simple idea: if you see something unfair, speaking up takes courage. Sometimes nobody listens. Sometimes everyone laughs. But sometimes, speaking up — especially when many people do it together — changes the world. You are never too small to speak up about what is right.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Peaceful strength
PurposeChildren learn that peaceful, non-violent action is usually stronger than fighting.
How to run itAsk: if someone is being unfair, what can you do? Some children will say: shout at them. Hit them. Get angry. Explain gently: those things might feel good for a moment. But they rarely work. They often make things worse. The person stays angry. No one learns anything. And the unfairness continues. What actually changes minds is usually different. Staying calm. Speaking clearly. Showing others what is happening. Refusing to go along with the unfairness — without using anger or violence. This is called being peaceful, or non-violent. Tell a simple story. In India, a long time ago, a country called Britain ruled over India. The British made the Indian people pay a tax on salt — something every family needed. A man called Mahatma Gandhi said: 'This is wrong. I will break the law. I will make my own salt from the sea.' He walked 240 miles (a very long walk) to the sea, with thousands of people joining him. He picked up salt from the beach. Many others did too. The British arrested thousands of people, but more kept joining. Gandhi did not fight. He did not let his followers fight. He just refused — peacefully — to accept the unfair rule. People all over the world saw what was happening. The British could not keep going. Years later, India became free. Gandhi's way of peaceful resistance became a model for many others. Discuss: why did peaceful action work? Because it showed everyone, clearly, who was being unfair. The people peacefully refusing were not the problem. The unfair rule was the problem. People around the world could see it. And the people who made the unfair rules started to feel ashamed. Finish with a simple idea: peaceful refusal, done by many people together, is one of the strongest things in the world. Much stronger than shouting or fighting. It has changed laws, ended rules, freed countries. And it only works when people stay calm and brave at the same time.
💡 Low-resource tipTell the story verbally. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Many voices together
PurposeChildren understand that change usually happens when many people stand up together.
How to run itAsk: if one child thought a rule was unfair and spoke up, how much would happen? Sometimes a lot — a teacher might listen and think again. But often, one voice alone is not heard. Now ask: what if ten children said the same thing? What if the whole class said it? What if the whole school said it? Usually, more voices together are harder to ignore. Discuss: this is called 'collective action' — when many people act together for the same thing. Alone, each person is small. Together, they can change things that would be impossible alone. Tell examples of children acting together. In 1963, in a city called Birmingham in the United States, Black children joined a protest against unfair laws. Thousands of children marched, sang songs, and refused to accept the unfair rules. Many were arrested. Pictures of children being treated badly by police shocked the whole country. People who had not paid attention before started to care. Laws began to change. In 2012, a teenager called Malala Yousafzai in Pakistan spoke up about girls' right to go to school. Others were doing it too, but her voice — and the dangerous attack she survived — made the world pay attention. She has helped change how millions of people think about girls' education. Many young people today work together on things like climate change, fairness, and peace. Greta Thunberg in Sweden started sitting outside parliament every Friday to demand action on climate change. Millions of young people around the world joined her. Ask: have you ever worked together with others on something important? Discuss. Finish with a simple idea: you are never alone. When enough people agree that something is wrong, they can act together. One voice is small. Many voices together are strong enough to change the world. And children are a real part of that. Many of the most important changes in history have been pushed forward by young people who refused to wait until they grew up.
💡 Low-resource tipTell the examples verbally. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1Have you ever spoken up about something you thought was unfair?
  • Q2Why do you think peaceful action often works better than fighting?
  • Q3Can children really help change things, or do they have to wait to grow up?
  • Q4What makes a protest peaceful?
  • Q5Who is a person in history you admire for speaking up?
Writing Tasks
Drawing task
Draw a picture of people speaking up peacefully for something important — a march, a sign, a quiet protest. Write or say: People protest because ___________. Peaceful action is strong because ___________.
Skills: Building positive images of peaceful protest
Sentence completion
When I see something unfair, a brave thing to do is ___________. Many people together are ___________.
Skills: Articulating courage and collective action
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Breaking any law is wrong, so people who break laws in protests are bad.

What to teach instead

Most laws are there for good reasons and should be followed. But not every law has been good. In many countries, there have been laws that treated some people as less than others — laws that said Black and white children could not go to the same schools, laws that stopped women from voting, laws that banned certain religions. People who broke those laws to show they were wrong were not bad — they were brave. Today, we look back at them as heroes. We remember Rosa Parks, who refused to give up her bus seat. Gandhi, who broke the salt law in India. The people who helped hide Jewish families during the Nazi time. They all broke laws. They were right to. The question is not just 'did they break the law?' but 'was the law just?' When a law is clearly unfair, refusing to obey it — peacefully — is sometimes the right thing to do.

Common misconception

Children are too young to make any real difference on big issues.

What to teach instead

History shows this is not true. Many huge changes have been pushed by young people. Children marched in the American civil rights movement and helped change laws. Malala Yousafzai spoke up for girls' education as a teenager and became one of the most famous voices in the world for education. Greta Thunberg started climate strikes as a schoolgirl that spread to millions of young people worldwide. Young people in many countries have led campaigns about fairness, peace, and the environment. You do not have to wait to grow up to care, to learn, to speak, or to join others. Children often see things adults have got used to. Young voices have always been part of change.

Core Ideas
1 Protest as a part of democracy
2 The difference between protest and civil disobedience
3 Why peaceful (non-violent) action works
4 Famous movements that changed the world
5 Costs and risks of protest
6 When is resistance right?
7 Protest in democracies and under repression
Background for Teachers

Protest and civil disobedience are among the most powerful forces for change in human history. Nearly every major expansion of rights and justice has involved organised resistance — by people who refused to accept unjust laws or practices. Democracies formally protect protest through freedom of assembly and expression. Authoritarian systems often repress it brutally. Teaching this topic well requires helping students understand both what protest is and why it matters. Protest is any public action that expresses opposition or demands change — marches, rallies, strikes, petitions, boycotts, picket lines, and more. Most protests are legal, exercising constitutional rights. Civil disobedience is a specific form — deliberately breaking a law believed to be unjust, openly and usually peacefully, willing to accept legal consequences as part of making the point. The distinction matters. Protest within the law is protected in democracies; civil disobedience accepts legal consequences to dramatise injustice. Non-violence has been the most effective strategy in most successful movements. Research by Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan (Why Civil Resistance Works, 2011) found that non-violent resistance campaigns between 1900 and 2006 succeeded in achieving their goals roughly 50% of the time, compared with about 25% for violent campaigns. Non-violence draws in wider participation, splits the opposition, gains international sympathy, and reduces state repression's legitimacy.

Major historical examples

Indian independence (Gandhi's satyagraha movement, 1915-1947). US civil rights movement (Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, SCLC, SNCC, and many others, 1950s-1960s).

US labour movement

Women's suffrage movements (UK suffragettes, US suffragists). Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution (1989). East German protests leading to the fall of the Berlin Wall. South Africa's anti-apartheid movement (combined non-violent and armed approaches). Philippine People Power revolution (1986). Arab Spring (2010-2012, with mixed outcomes).

More recently

Black Lives Matter, Hong Kong democracy protests, Fridays for Future climate strikes, Iranian Women, Life, Freedom movement, and many others.

Philosophical foundations

Henry David Thoreau's 'Civil Disobedience' (1849), written after he refused to pay taxes funding slavery and the Mexican-American War, argued that conscience is higher than law when laws support injustice. Gandhi developed satyagraha (truth-force) as systematic non-violent resistance philosophy. Martin Luther King's 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (1963) is a foundational text on the duty to resist unjust laws. When is resistance right? Serious ethical thinking has tried to identify when civil disobedience is justified.

Typical criteria

The law being broken is seriously unjust; peaceful legal means have been tried; the action is open (not sneaky); the action is non-violent; participants accept legal consequences; the action is directed at injustice, not self-interest. These criteria distinguish conscientious civil disobedience from ordinary lawbreaking.

Costs and risks

Real protest involves real risk. Arrest, injury, loss of employment, social ostracism. In repressive regimes, torture and death. Even in democracies, protesters have been killed (Kent State 1970, many civil rights activists). The costs fall disproportionately on certain groups — in the US civil rights movement, mostly on Black participants. Protest is not a sport; it is often dangerous work. In democracies and under repression. Democracies typically protect protest rights (assembly, free speech) and most protests are legal. Civil disobedience remains risky even in democracies but is protected in many ways. In authoritarian systems, all opposition is often treated as illegal, and protesters face brutal consequences. The moral and practical calculations differ substantially.

Teaching note

Be aware that students' families may have direct experience of protest — perhaps as activists, perhaps as victims of repression.

Handle with care

Present protest as neither glamorous nor cynical. It has been central to progress; it has also had failures and excesses. Help students understand it seriously.

Key Vocabulary
Protest
Public action expressing opposition or demanding change. Can include marches, rallies, strikes, petitions, boycotts, and sit-ins. Most protests are legal and protected in democracies.
Civil disobedience
Deliberately breaking a law believed to be unjust — openly, non-violently, and often accepting legal consequences. A specific form of protest used by Thoreau, Gandhi, King, and many others.
Non-violence
Achieving political change without using violence — through peaceful marches, strikes, boycotts, civil disobedience. Research shows it is usually more effective than violent struggle.
Satyagraha
Gandhi's word for 'truth-force' or 'soul-force' — the philosophy of active non-violent resistance that he developed in South Africa and India. Has influenced movements around the world.
Boycott
Organised refusal to buy from, use, or cooperate with a business, country, or organisation — to pressure it to change. The Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-1956) is famous.
Strike
Workers refusing to work until demands are met. A fundamental tool of labour rights movements throughout history.
Freedom of assembly
The right to gather peacefully to express views, protected in most democratic constitutions and international human rights law. A foundation of protest rights.
Repression
Action by governments or authorities to stop or punish protest — through arrest, violence, surveillance, or other means. Can discourage some protest but often fuels more.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — Why protest matters in history
PurposeStudents understand that most major changes have involved organised protest.
How to run itAsk: can you think of changes in history that happened just because politicians decided to change things, without people demanding it? It is hard to find many. Most big changes — end of slavery, women's vote, civil rights, ending of colonial rule, better working conditions, environmental protections — came because people demanded them. Walk through famous movements. The movement to end slavery. In Britain, activists worked for decades, organising petitions, holding public meetings, boycotting slave-produced sugar, and challenging the system. Enslaved people themselves resisted constantly, from plantation rebellions to the Haitian Revolution. The transatlantic slave trade was eventually abolished by the British Empire in 1807, with slavery itself abolished across the empire in 1833. The US ended slavery only after a civil war. None of this was gifted by grateful governments — it was demanded, over generations, by organised resistance. Women's suffrage. Women did not have the vote in most countries until the 20th century. In the UK, the suffragette movement (WSPU, formed 1903) combined peaceful campaigning with some militant acts. Many suffragettes were imprisoned; some force-fed while on hunger strike. In the US, women's suffrage activists organised for over 70 years before the 19th Amendment (1920). New Zealand led the way in 1893. Similar movements in many countries. Without this organised, often illegal, resistance, women would have had the vote decades later, if at all. The US civil rights movement. From the 1950s, Black Americans and white allies organised against segregation. Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat (1955), launching the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Students sat at segregated lunch counters (1960). Freedom Riders travelled segregated buses to challenge illegal practices (1961). Martin Luther King led marches, wrote from jail, and spoke at the 1963 March on Washington. Children marched in Birmingham (1963). The Selma to Montgomery marches (1965) were brutally attacked. The Voting Rights Act (1965) followed. Legal segregation ended, though racial injustice persisted and continues. Indian independence. Gandhi's leadership of non-violent resistance to British rule (1915-1947). The Salt March (1930) — 240 miles to make salt in defiance of British tax. Mass non-cooperation. Widespread civil disobedience. Britain eventually left India in 1947. Anti-apartheid in South Africa. Decades of resistance against racial apartheid. Bus boycotts, strikes, international boycotts, sanctions. The ANC, under Mandela and others, combined non-violent and armed resistance. Internal resistance and international pressure eventually ended apartheid (1994). Mandela, imprisoned for 27 years, became president. Labour movements worldwide. Modern labour rights — the weekend, 8-hour day, safe working conditions, pensions — all came from organised worker resistance. Strikes, unionising, sometimes violent struggles. Most workers today benefit daily from what earlier workers fought for. Discuss what this teaches. History is not made mainly by politicians granting rights. It is made largely by ordinary people demanding them. The people we now call heroes — Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Gandhi, suffragettes, abolitionists — were often called troublemakers, criminals, or worse in their own time. Many were imprisoned, beaten, or killed. They did what they did because they believed the unjust system had to change, and they were willing to pay a price. Discuss implications. Rights and freedoms we take for granted were fought for. They are not permanent gifts. They require ongoing defense. And when new injustices arise, ordinary people must again organise, protest, sometimes break laws. This is not in conflict with democracy — it is part of how democracy actually works. Finish with a point. If you remove protest from history, you remove most of human progress. Celebrating protest honestly — not only when looking back at the winners, but also when it is happening now — is part of being a real citizen.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents examples verbally. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Why non-violence works
PurposeStudents understand the specific power of non-violent resistance.
How to run itAsk: if you wanted to change an unjust system, what would be more effective — violence or non-violence? Most students might think violence is more powerful — it is louder, it is shown in films, it seems 'serious'. The research shows the opposite. Walk through Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan's research. In 'Why Civil Resistance Works' (2011), they studied 323 major resistance campaigns between 1900 and 2006. Findings: non-violent campaigns succeeded about 53% of the time. Violent campaigns succeeded about 26% of the time. Non-violent campaigns were about twice as likely to achieve their goals. Why does non-violence work? Walk through the reasons. Broader participation. More people can join non-violent movements. Violent movements usually involve young, fit men. Non-violent movements can include children, elderly people, women, disabled people, professionals, workers, religious people. When 3.5% of a population participates actively, non-violent movements have never failed (a striking finding). This broad participation is possible because non-violence is open to almost everyone. Moral clarity. Non-violent action shows clearly who is being unjust. When peaceful marchers are beaten by police, the injustice is visible. When protesters attack police, the moral picture becomes muddy. Non-violence makes the injustice harder to hide. This is why images of peaceful protesters being attacked — children hosed in Birmingham, marchers beaten in Selma — changed public opinion. Legitimacy. Non-violent movements typically maintain broad public support. Violent movements often alienate potential supporters. Once a movement is seen as violent, people who might have joined or supported become afraid. Splits the opposition. Non-violent pressure can split ruling groups. Some police refuse to fire on peaceful protesters. Some officials resign. Some business leaders pressure for change. Violence tends to unify the opposition against a clear enemy. International support. The world responds differently to non-violent and violent movements. Non-violent movements attract international sympathy, sanctions on repressive governments, diplomatic pressure. Violent movements often lose this. Sustains itself. Non-violent movements can continue for years. Violent ones often exhaust themselves, are defeated militarily, or become authoritarian themselves after victory. Walk through specific examples. Gandhi's salt campaign — thousands arrested peacefully, none fighting back, world watches, British position becomes untenable. Civil rights marches — peaceful children attacked by dogs and fire hoses in 1963 changed public opinion irreversibly. Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution 1989 — weeks of peaceful demonstrations ended communist rule with almost no violence. Philippine People Power 1986 — Filipino civilians, including nuns holding rosaries, blocked soldiers sent to attack democratic protesters, ending Marcos dictatorship. Serbian Otpor 2000 — non-violent movement helped remove Milošević. Discuss limits. Non-violence is not passive. It requires discipline, training, organisation. Gandhi's followers trained extensively in how to respond to violence without responding in kind. Civil rights activists trained in non-violent response before lunch counter sit-ins. Non-violence also requires courage equal to or greater than violence — you must face beatings, arrest, sometimes death, without fighting back. Discuss what does not work. Anger alone. Spontaneous rage. Attacking individual opponents. Isolated acts of violence, even against unjust systems, usually fail. They alienate potential supporters and invite overwhelming repression. Finish with a point. The myth that violence is 'serious' and non-violence is 'soft' is empirically wrong. The evidence shows that non-violent movements win more often, last longer, and produce better post-victory outcomes than violent ones. This does not mean non-violence is easy or safe. But it does mean it is a powerful strategy — not a weak one. Students who understand this have better tools for thinking about change than those who assume violence is the only 'real' option.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents research and examples verbally. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — When is resistance right?
PurposeStudents engage with the ethical question of when civil disobedience is justified.
How to run itStart with the core question. When, if ever, is it right to break the law? Most of us would say: almost never. Laws are usually there for good reasons. Breaking them causes problems. But most thoughtful people also agree that sometimes breaking a law is right — even required. Walk through the clear cases. Slavery. For centuries, in many countries, it was legal to own other human beings. People who helped escaped enslaved people were breaking the law. Were they wrong? Almost no one today would say yes. They were right, even while breaking the law. Nazi Germany. German laws required cooperation with the persecution of Jewish people. Germans who hid Jewish neighbours were breaking the law. Were they wrong? No. The law was wrong. Hiding people from murderers was the right thing to do, regardless of what the law said. Segregation. In the US South until the 1960s, laws required racial segregation. Rosa Parks broke the law by refusing to give up her bus seat. Was she wrong? No. She was right. Children at lunch counters breaking segregation laws were right. Apartheid. In South Africa, laws enforced racial discrimination. Nelson Mandela and countless others broke them. Was Mandela wrong? No. He was right. Women's suffrage. Women in many countries broke laws to demand the vote — smashing windows, chaining themselves to railings, hunger-striking. Were they wrong? No. The laws denying them the vote were wrong. Discuss what these cases share. In each, the law being broken was itself deeply unjust. Obeying would have meant accepting that injustice. Breaking it, openly and with willingness to face consequences, was a moral choice — not a selfish one. The people who did these things were often imprisoned, beaten, or killed. They made their choices with their eyes open. Introduce the idea of civil disobedience. The specific form of protest where someone deliberately breaks a law they believe to be unjust, openly and usually peacefully, willing to accept legal consequences. The acceptance of consequences is important — it distinguishes civil disobedience from ordinary law-breaking, and shows the seriousness of the moral claim. Walk through Thoreau, Gandhi, King. Henry David Thoreau (1849) wrote 'Civil Disobedience' after refusing to pay taxes funding slavery and the Mexican-American War. Argued that going along with an unjust government makes one complicit. Mahatma Gandhi developed satyagraha — active non-violent resistance — as a way to confront injustice without matching violence with violence. Martin Luther King's 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (1963) is a foundational defense. King distinguished just from unjust laws: a just law is in harmony with the moral law; an unjust law is not. He argued that breaking unjust laws was required by conscience. Discuss criteria for justified civil disobedience. Most thoughtful writers suggest similar tests. The law being broken must be seriously unjust. Peaceful legal means must have been tried. The action must be open, not sneaky. The action should be non-violent. Participants should accept legal consequences. The action should be aimed at injustice, not self-interest. These criteria distinguish conscientious civil disobedience from ordinary lawbreaking. Discuss hard cases. Climate activists blocking roads to demand climate action — are they breaking the law rightly? Different people give different answers. Some argue the climate emergency justifies disruption; others argue disruption alienates the public and does not actually change policy. These are real debates. Animal rights activists breaking into laboratories to release animals — unjust law against animal cruelty, or property destruction for private views? Again, debates. The criteria help but do not settle every case. Discuss what civil disobedience asks of citizens. Obedience to law is normally right. Breaking laws is normally wrong. Civil disobedience asks citizens to take responsibility for thinking about whether specific laws are just, and for accepting consequences when they act on conscience. This is demanding. It is also what active citizenship in difficult circumstances can require. Finish with a point. History's heroes are often rule-breakers. But they broke rules for the right reasons, in the right ways, with willingness to pay the price. Understanding when civil disobedience is justified — and when it is just selfishness in disguise — is one of the most important ethical skills a citizen can develop.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. Handle thoughtfully. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1Can you think of a change in your country that came because people protested?
  • Q2When is breaking a law the right thing to do? What tests would you use?
  • Q3Why do you think non-violent protest has often worked better than violent struggle?
  • Q4Are there any protests happening today that you think are important?
  • Q5Is protest part of democracy, or against it? Why?
  • Q6What kinds of protest do you think should be protected, and what kinds not?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Explain and give an example
Explain what civil disobedience is and give ONE example of a movement where it produced important change. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Defining civil disobedience with a concrete case
Task 2 — Persuasive writing
Write a short piece (4 to 6 sentences) arguing that peaceful protest is an important and protected part of democracy — not a threat to it — and explain why.
Skills: Persuasive writing on protest's democratic role
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Protest only works when it leads to violence — that's what really gets attention.

What to teach instead

The evidence points the opposite direction. Research by Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan on over 300 major resistance campaigns found that non-violent campaigns succeed about twice as often as violent ones. Non-violence draws in wider participation, makes the injustice of the opposition clearer, maintains legitimacy, splits the other side, and gains international support. Violent campaigns more often alienate potential supporters, unify the opposition, and invite overwhelming repression. The myth that 'violence gets things done' is not supported by the historical record. Gandhi, King, the Czechoslovak Velvet Revolution, the Philippine People Power revolution, and many others demonstrated that disciplined non-violence can change even very powerful unjust systems. Violence is loud; non-violence is more often effective.

Common misconception

People who protest are troublemakers who do not respect the law or their country.

What to teach instead

Many of the people today considered national heroes — Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Susan B. Anthony, Gandhi, Nelson Mandela — were called troublemakers and lawbreakers in their own time. They loved their countries or communities deeply. That is why they were willing to face prison, beatings, and death to make them more just. Peaceful protest is not disrespect — it is active citizenship. It is how people without direct political power make their concerns heard. The right to protest is protected in most democratic constitutions precisely because founding generations understood its importance. Labelling protesters as troublemakers is often a way powerful interests avoid addressing the issues they raise. A country where people cannot protest is not a stronger country — it is a weaker democracy.

Common misconception

Civil disobedience works in the past but no longer works today — the world is different now.

What to teach instead

Civil disobedience and organised protest have continued to drive change in recent decades. The fall of communist governments in Eastern Europe (1989-1991) involved massive non-violent resistance. The Philippine People Power revolution (1986) removed a dictator. Serbia's Otpor movement helped end Milošević's rule. The Arab Spring began with peaceful protest. Hong Kong's democracy movement, Iran's Women, Life, Freedom movement, Fridays for Future climate strikes, Black Lives Matter — all contemporary movements using protest and civil disobedience. Some have succeeded; some have faced brutal repression; all have changed public conversations. The claim that protest no longer works usually misunderstands history — most victories take years or decades, and most major changes have involved organised resistance. The tools evolve (social media now matters), but the core principle — that many people organised around a clear just demand can change things — still applies.

Core Ideas
1 Protest as foundational to democratic development
2 Theories of civil disobedience
3 The 3.5% rule and research on civil resistance
4 Historical movements — successes, failures, trade-offs
5 Protest under authoritarian regimes
6 Contemporary movements and digital activism
7 The ethics of disruption and property damage
8 Surveillance, repression, and the policing of protest
Background for Teachers

Protest and civil disobedience are among the most important mechanisms of political and social change, with substantial theoretical and empirical research literatures. Teaching them at secondary level requires engaging with history, ethics, social science, and current events.

Historical framing

Nearly every major expansion of rights and justice in modern history has involved organised protest and often civil disobedience. Abolition of slavery, women's suffrage, labour rights, civil rights, anti-colonial movements, anti-apartheid, LGBTQ rights, environmental protection — all emerged through sustained resistance. Resistance is a core mechanism of democratic change.

Theories of civil disobedience

Classical sources include Henry David Thoreau's 'Civil Disobedience' (1849) — a response to his imprisonment for refusing taxes supporting slavery and war. Thoreau argued conscience must be higher than law; going along with unjust government makes one complicit. Gandhi's satyagraha (truth-force) developed systematic non-violent resistance theory in South Africa (from 1906) and India (1915-1947).

Key principles

Means shape ends; willingness to suffer without retaliation; focus on converting opponents rather than defeating them; public action with moral clarity. Martin Luther King's 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (1963) is a foundational text. King distinguished just and unjust laws — just laws uplift human personality, unjust laws degrade it. He articulated the four steps of non-violent campaign: fact-finding, negotiation, self-purification, direct action. He argued that those who break unjust laws must accept legal consequences to demonstrate moral seriousness. John Rawls's 'A Theory of Justice' (1971) offers a liberal theory of civil disobedience — justified when: clear violations of justice; normal appeals have failed; action is public, non-violent, willing to accept punishment; proportionate to wrong. Other theorists (Hannah Arendt, Ronald Dworkin, Candice Delmas, and others) have developed and critiqued these positions. Delmas, in 'A Duty to Resist' (2018), argues that citizens have duties to resist unjust laws, not merely rights.

Research on civil resistance

Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan's 'Why Civil Resistance Works' (2011) studied 323 major resistance campaigns (violent and non-violent) from 1900 to 2006.

Key findings

Non-violent campaigns succeeded 53% of the time; violent campaigns 26%. Non-violent campaigns more effective at mobilising large participation, maintaining legitimacy, dividing opposition, attracting international support. The 3.5% rule — no non-violent campaign mobilising at least 3.5% of the population has ever failed to achieve its goals (though this is correlation, not guarantee). Subsequent research (Chenoweth's 2021 update) has noted that success rates have declined somewhat in the 2010s, raising questions about new challenges.

Major historical movements

Indian independence (Gandhi, Nehru, others; 1915-1947). Most movements drew on Gandhi's influence directly or indirectly. US civil rights movement (1950s-1960s).

Key figures

King, Rosa Parks, Ella Baker, Bayard Rustin, Fannie Lou Hamer, James Baldwin, Malcolm X (contrasting approach), and many others.

Organisations

NAACP, SCLC, SNCC, CORE.

Major events

Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-1956), Greensboro sit-ins (1960), Freedom Rides (1961), March on Washington (1963), Birmingham campaign (1963), Selma to Montgomery marches (1965).

Achievements

Civil Rights Act (1964), Voting Rights Act (1965), ending of legal segregation.

Limits

Continued racial injustice in many forms.

Women's suffrage

British suffragettes (WSPU, from 1903). Combined peaceful campaigning with militant acts. US suffragists' long campaign culminating in 19th Amendment (1920).

Similar struggles worldwide

Anti-apartheid.

Decades of resistance

Mass protests, international boycotts, sanctions campaigns. Internal resistance (ANC, UDF, student movements, trade unions) and international pressure ended apartheid (1994). End of Eastern European communism. 1989 revolutions in Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria. Most were non-violent (Romania exception). The Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia ended communist rule in weeks. Philippine People Power (1986) ended Marcos dictatorship. Arab Spring (2010-2012). Mixed outcomes — Tunisia's transition most successful, Egypt reversed, Syria and Libya descended into conflict. Demonstrates both the power and the fragility of protest movements.

Contemporary movements

Black Lives Matter (from 2013). Climate movements including Fridays for Future, Extinction Rebellion. Hong Kong democracy protests (2019-2020). Iranian Women, Life, Freedom movement (2022-).

Me Too

Farmers' protests in India (2020-2021).

Many others

Outcomes vary.

Protest under authoritarian regimes

Authoritarian regimes typically repress all opposition. Costs of protest can include imprisonment, torture, death, exile.

Success requires

Courage; creative non-violent tactics; external support; splits within the regime; often years of sustained resistance. Some authoritarian regimes have fallen to protest (Serbia 2000, Georgia 2003, Ukraine 2004 and 2014, Tunisia 2011, Armenia 2018, Sri Lanka 2022). Others have crushed protests or absorbed them.

Digital activism

Social media has transformed organising. Arab Spring was partly organised through Facebook and Twitter. Hong Kong protesters used online platforms for coordination. Climate movements reach millions through digital networks. At the same time, governments use digital tools for surveillance and repression. The picture is not simply empowering — it's contested terrain.

Ethics of disruption

Contemporary climate movements have engaged in disruptive tactics (road blockages, art vandalism, infrastructure actions).

Debate

Does disruption build support or alienate?

Evidence suggests

Highly disruptive tactics that do not clearly connect to the cause often alienate; disruptive tactics that clearly dramatise the cause (like Extinction Rebellion's death-in protests) can mobilise. The 'radical flank effect' — where disruptive tactics can make moderate demands seem reasonable — has been documented.

Policing of protest

Governments respond to protest in varied ways. Facilitative policing (working with protesters) versus confrontational policing. In many democracies, police tactics have militarised over decades. Surveillance of activists is substantial. Laws increasingly criminalise specific protest tactics (UK Public Order Act 2023, US state anti-protest laws). The shrinking space for protest is a concern even in consolidated democracies.

Teaching note

This topic is politically contested. Protesters are celebrated in retrospect but often demonised in their moment. Students may be in families with strong views on specific protests.

Handle respectfully

Focus on

Understanding what protest is and how it works; distinguishing effective from ineffective tactics; engaging with the ethical questions about civil disobedience; recognising the role of protest in democratic development. Neither glorify nor dismiss.

Key Vocabulary
Civil disobedience
Deliberate, public, non-violent breaking of a law believed to be unjust, willing to accept legal consequences. Distinguished from ordinary lawbreaking by conscientious motivation and acceptance of consequences.
Non-violent resistance
A strategy and set of techniques for achieving political change without violence. Not passive — involves disciplined, often confrontational action. Gandhi's satyagraha is the foundational modern theory.
Satyagraha
Gandhi's philosophy and practice of non-violent resistance, meaning 'truth-force' or 'soul-force'. Core principle: means shape ends; willing to suffer without retaliating; aims to convert rather than defeat opponents.
The 3.5% rule
The empirical observation, from Chenoweth and Stephan's research, that no non-violent movement mobilising at least 3.5% of the population has failed to achieve its goals. Correlation rather than guarantee, but striking finding.
Radical flank effect
The phenomenon where more radical elements of a movement can make moderate elements' demands appear reasonable by comparison — sometimes helping achieve goals that moderation alone could not.
Repression
State action to suppress protest — arrests, violence, surveillance, new laws criminalising protest activity. Heavy repression sometimes succeeds in ending movements; sometimes fuels them by creating sympathy.
Direct action
Taking action oneself to address a problem or injustice rather than asking authorities to do so. Includes strikes, boycotts, sit-ins, occupations, and many other tactics. Often associated with anarchist and activist traditions.
Movement
A coordinated collective effort to achieve social or political change. Differs from a one-off protest — involves sustained organising, multiple tactics, shared identity, long-term commitment.
Public Order Acts
Laws regulating public assembly and protest. Recent UK examples (2022, 2023) have been criticised by rights groups as criminalising peaceful protest. Similar laws exist in many countries.
Kettling
A police tactic of surrounding and confining protesters in a limited area for extended periods. Challenged in courts as excessive but still used in several democracies.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — The evidence on why non-violence works
PurposeStudents engage seriously with research showing non-violent resistance's effectiveness.
How to run itBegin with a surprising claim backed by research. Non-violent resistance has been roughly twice as effective as violent resistance at achieving political goals in the 20th and early 21st centuries. This is not ideology — it is empirical finding. Walk through the research. Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan, 'Why Civil Resistance Works' (2011). They compiled data on 323 major resistance campaigns worldwide between 1900 and 2006, both violent and non-violent. They tracked whether each campaign achieved its stated goals. Their finding: 53% of non-violent campaigns succeeded. 26% of violent campaigns succeeded. Non-violent campaigns roughly twice as likely to succeed. This held across regions, time periods, regime types, and other factors. Subsequent research (Chenoweth, 'Civil Resistance: What Everyone Needs to Know', 2021) has tracked developments since, finding that success rates have declined somewhat in the 2010s — raising questions about what has changed. Walk through why non-violence works. Participation. Non-violent movements can recruit widely — children, elderly, women, disabled people, professionals, religious groups, workers. Violent movements recruit narrowly (typically young, fit men). More participation means more leverage. Chenoweth notes the 3.5% rule: no non-violent movement mobilising at least 3.5% of the population has ever failed to achieve its goals. Moral clarity. When peaceful protesters are attacked, injustice is visible. When protesters attack, the moral picture muddies. Bull Connor's 1963 use of dogs and fire hoses on peaceful Birmingham children produced iconic images that changed US public opinion. Massacres of peaceful protesters in Selma (1965), Sharpeville (1960), Tiananmen (1989), and elsewhere have similarly shifted public understanding — at moral cost to repressive regimes. Legitimacy. Non-violent movements generally maintain broader support. Populations that reject violence as a tool can accept non-violent resistance. This is important — movements ultimately succeed by changing what enough people believe is acceptable. Splits in opposition. Non-violent movements can split their opponents. Some police refuse to fire on peaceful protesters. Some officials resign. Some business leaders join calls for change. The Soviet and East German military refused to fire on protesters in 1989, and regimes fell. Violence against regimes unifies them in response. International support. Non-violent movements attract international sympathy, economic sanctions on repressive governments, diplomatic pressure. Violent movements struggle to maintain this. Less violence in aftermath. Post-victory, non-violent movements produce more democratic outcomes than violent ones. Successful armed revolutions often produce authoritarian regimes; successful non-violent revolutions more often produce democracies. Walk through cases. Philippine People Power 1986. Millions of Filipinos, including nuns with rosaries, blocked soldiers sent against democratic protesters, ending the Marcos dictatorship. Eastern European revolutions of 1989. Sustained peaceful protest in Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria ended communist rule. Most spectacularly, Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution went from initial student protest to a new government within six weeks. Serbia 2000. The Otpor movement used disciplined non-violent tactics to remove Milošević after Yugoslavia's 1990s wars had thoroughly discredited violent approaches. Georgia 2003, Ukraine 2004 (Orange Revolution) and 2014 (Euromaidan), Tunisia 2011. All substantially non-violent, all successful at regime change (outcomes after varied). Walk through limits. Non-violence has not always worked. Syrian uprisings (2011) faced massive brutality; peaceful resistance failed to prevent devastating civil war. Myanmar 2021 military coup overcame substantial peaceful resistance. Sudan 2019 succeeded in removing al-Bashir but subsequent coup (2021) undid democratic progress. Hong Kong protests (2019-2020) faced Chinese crackdown despite massive peaceful participation. These cases show non-violence is not magic. Success requires: disciplined practice of non-violence; broad participation; international context; some ambiguity in the ruling regime. Lacking these, even heroic non-violent movements can fail. Discuss contemporary developments. Why has success rate declined since 2010? Chenoweth points to several factors: authoritarian learning — regimes have developed better tactics to manage protests; digital surveillance enabling earlier identification of leaders; social media environments fracturing rather than unifying movements; deeper polarisation within democratic societies; more sophisticated authoritarian control over media. These are not counsels of despair but suggest that current non-violent movements need different strategies than earlier ones. Discuss the political implications. If non-violence generally works better than violence, and if violence is more likely to produce authoritarian outcomes, citizens considering how to respond to injustice have reason to prioritise non-violent methods. This is not passive acceptance of injustice — it is more effective resistance. Discuss what non-violence requires. Training. Discipline. Organisation. Courage equal to or greater than armed resistance. Gandhi's followers trained extensively. Civil rights activists trained before lunch counter sit-ins. Movements that appear spontaneous usually rest on years of preparation. Finish with a point. The popular framing that 'violence is serious, non-violence is soft' is empirically wrong. Non-violence is often the most effective form of resistance ever developed. It also produces better outcomes after victory. Citizens — including students — considering how to act on injustice have strong reasons to study and support non-violent methods.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents research verbally. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — The ethics of civil disobedience
PurposeStudents engage with the serious philosophical debate about when civil disobedience is justified.
How to run itBegin with the tension. In a democracy, we accept that laws are binding. Elections legitimise government. Courts resolve disputes. This system works, and we generally accept its results even when we disagree with specific laws. Yet civil disobedience involves deliberately breaking laws. How can this be reconciled with democratic commitment? Walk through the classic positions. Martin Luther King's 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (1963). Written to clergy who criticised King's protests as 'untimely'. King argued that citizens have a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. He drew on Augustine, Aquinas, and biblical traditions to distinguish just from unjust laws: a just law uplifts human personality and conforms with moral law; an unjust law degrades it and contradicts moral law. Unjust laws are 'no law at all'. King argued that peaceful civil disobedience, with acceptance of legal consequences, expresses the highest respect for law by holding it to the standard of justice. John Rawls's theory. In 'A Theory of Justice' (1971), Rawls argued civil disobedience in democracies is justified when: clear violations of fundamental justice; normal political appeals have been tried and failed; action is public, non-violent, willing to accept punishment; action is proportionate to the wrong. These criteria preserve democratic commitment (only serious injustice justifies disobedience; legal means should be tried first) while acknowledging that democracies can produce unjust laws requiring resistance. Hannah Arendt's view. In 'Civil Disobedience' (1972), written after Vietnam protests, Arendt framed civil disobedience as necessary to democracy — citizens checking what representatives have done, through collective action outside electoral channels. Ronald Dworkin's view. Dworkin distinguished 'integrity-based' civil disobedience (refusing to participate in injustice), 'justice-based' (persuading others by example), and 'policy-based' (changing specific laws). All can be justified under different conditions. Candice Delmas's 'A Duty to Resist' (2018). Argues that citizens have duties, not just rights, to resist injustice. This goes beyond classical accounts — suggesting civil disobedience is sometimes required, not merely permitted. Walk through the contrast. Critics argue civil disobedience threatens democratic stability — if people can break laws they disagree with, law loses authority. The response: civil disobedience is not disagreement with specific laws but response to fundamental injustice; it accepts legal consequences, showing respect for rule of law; it is public, not sneaky; it uses non-violent means. These features distinguish principled civil disobedience from ordinary lawbreaking. Critics also argue that in a democracy, people should work through elections and legal channels. Response: democracy can produce unjust laws. Elections take years; immediate injustice may require immediate response. Majorities can oppress minorities; civil disobedience may be the only response. Democratic systems often fail to respond to minority concerns without dramatic action. Discuss specific cases. Conscientious objection to war. When a government orders young citizens to fight a war they consider unjust, must they obey? Most democratic traditions now recognise some form of conscientious objection. Martin Luther King opposed the Vietnam War; many others refused the draft. Aid to fugitive enslaved people. The Underground Railroad broke US federal law. No serious person today would criticise those who ran it. Hiding Jewish people from Nazis. Clearly right, despite violating German law. Hiding people from death squads in various dictatorships. Same principle. Protesting unjust wars. Vietnam protests broke some laws (trespassing, draft resistance). Many of the same protesters are now respected for their actions. Climate activism today. Extinction Rebellion, Just Stop Oil, and similar movements have engaged in civil disobedience (blocking roads, vandalising art with washable substances, blocking oil infrastructure). They argue: climate emergency is so serious, and normal means have failed, that disruptive civil disobedience is justified. Critics: these tactics alienate the public and do not change policy; they exceed traditional criteria for justified civil disobedience. Reasonable people disagree. Discuss hard questions. What counts as seriously unjust? Reasonable people disagree. A racist 1950s US white person might sincerely have believed segregation was just; we now see he was wrong. How do we judge? We need moral argument, not just personal view. But we also have to act on our own conscience, knowing we could be wrong. Who decides? Individual citizens, in the end, for their own consciences. But serious citizens think carefully, test their views against others, and consider whether their resistance serves the cause or undermines it. Does unprincipled civil disobedience damage the tradition? Possibly. If 'civil disobedience' becomes associated with self-interested lawbreaking, its moral force weakens. Serious movements usually distinguish themselves carefully. Discuss what this implies for citizens. In a democracy, most laws deserve obedience. Obedience is the normal default. But citizens should also understand that laws can be unjust, that democratic processes sometimes fail, and that conscience can require resistance. When it does, principled civil disobedience — open, peaceful, accepting consequences, proportionate — remains a legitimate response. Finish with a point. The question 'when is civil disobedience justified?' cannot be answered by a formula. It requires judgement. Students who engage with the tradition seriously — King, Thoreau, Gandhi, Rawls, Arendt, Delmas — develop better judgement than those who either reject civil disobedience entirely or embrace it uncritically. This judgement is one of the most important civic skills.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents theories and cases verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Protest in the digital age
PurposeStudents engage with how protest has changed — and not changed — in the digital era.
How to run itBegin with the observation. Protest in the 2020s looks different from protest in the 1960s. Social media, smartphones, digital organising have transformed how movements form, operate, and are contested. But the fundamentals — grievance, organising, courage, repression, uncertain outcomes — remain the same. Walk through what has changed. Speed of organising. Movements can now form much faster. Arab Spring uprisings emerged through social media calls to action. Black Lives Matter spread rapidly through viral videos and hashtags. Fridays for Future climate strikes spread globally from Greta Thunberg's initial Swedish action within months. Scale of reach. A single smartphone video can reach millions. The murder of George Floyd (2020) spread globally within hours, producing protests on every continent. Police brutality cases previously hidden from public view now receive international attention. Decentralisation. Movements like Hong Kong 2019-2020 protests were often leaderless, using encrypted messaging and open coordination platforms. This has advantages (harder to decapitate) and disadvantages (harder to negotiate or reach coherent conclusions). Live documentation. Protests are extensively documented in real time. Police behaviour is captured and shared. Protesters' own actions are documented — for good (accountability) and ill (identification and prosecution). New tactics. Flash mobs. Coordinated simultaneous actions across cities. Online 'raids' on institutional websites or social media. Hashtag activism — raising awareness through shared digital messaging. Digital boycotts and petition campaigns. Walk through what has not changed. Grievances remain rooted in real injustices — racism, inequality, authoritarianism, climate destruction, discrimination. Organising still requires trust, dedication, and long-term commitment. Quick digital mobilisation does not substitute for deep organising over time. Courage is still required. Protesters still face arrest, violence, surveillance, death. The Hong Kong protesters, Iranian women, Belarussian activists, Russian anti-war protesters — all face extreme personal costs. Repression still operates — often enhanced by digital tools (facial recognition, phone surveillance, social media monitoring). Change is still slow. Even with digital speed, successful movements typically work over years. The sense that digital movements can achieve quick victories is often illusion. Victories require sustained effort. Walk through specific digital era examples. Arab Spring (2010-2012). Rapid organising through social media. Initial successes (Tunisia) inspired movements across the region. Mixed outcomes — Tunisia's transition most successful, Egypt reversed by military coup, Syria and Libya descended into civil war. Demonstrates that digital tools help organise but don't automatically produce democratic outcomes. Black Lives Matter (from 2013). Built on hashtag and network organising, documentary videos of police violence, rapid response. Succeeded in changing public conversation about race and policing; substantive policy change has been partial and contested. Hong Kong democracy protests (2019-2020). Massive participation (over 2 million at peak in a city of 7 million). Decentralised organising through encrypted apps. Faced Chinese crackdown that has substantially ended open dissent. Fridays for Future climate strikes (from 2018). Rapid global spread through digital networks. Millions of young people in hundreds of cities. Outcomes — changed political conversation, some policy shifts, but climate crisis itself continues. Iranian Women, Life, Freedom (2022-). Massive protest following Mahsa Amini's death in custody. Women leading, international solidarity through hashtags and social media. Met with brutal repression. Ongoing resistance continues. Discuss how states have responded. Authoritarian regimes have invested heavily in digital surveillance, social media monitoring, and tools to disrupt protest organising. Russia, China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and many others use sophisticated tools. Democracies have also expanded surveillance of protesters. Facial recognition deployed at protests. Phone data sought by police. Activists' accounts scrutinised. In the UK, Public Order Acts (2022, 2023) have criminalised specific protest tactics. In the US, many states have passed anti-protest laws since 2017. This shrinking space for protest is a major concern. Discuss why success has been mixed. Chenoweth's recent research suggests non-violent movements have had lower success rates in the 2010s than in earlier decades. Possible reasons: authoritarian learning; digital surveillance; social media environments that fragment rather than unify; greater polarisation; more sophisticated authoritarian media control. Current movements face harder environment than those of the 1980s and 1990s. Discuss what seems to still work. Mass sustained participation. Broad coalitions including unexpected groups. Clear demands. Discipline under repression. International support. Connection to mainstream political actors. Movements that have all of these still achieve change. Movements without them struggle. Digital tools alone — without organising depth — rarely succeed. Discuss the role of young people. Current protest movements are often youth-led. Fridays for Future, Sunrise Movement (climate, US), Hong Kong democracy, Iran Women's movement — all have substantial youth participation. Young people have particular stake in future outcomes and less investment in current system. They also face particular risks. Finish with a point. Digital tools have changed how protest operates, but not what it fundamentally is. Organised collective action by people who refuse to accept injustice. Courage to act when authorities can identify, surveil, and punish. Commitment to sustain action over years, not days. These remain the core. Students today may participate in protest movements in their lives. Understanding both the fundamentals and the changing landscape prepares them better than assuming either everything is new (digital will solve it) or nothing has changed.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents examples and analysis verbally. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1Chenoweth and Stephan's research found non-violent resistance succeeds about twice as often as violent resistance. Why do you think this counter-intuitive finding remains surprising to many people?
  • Q2Martin Luther King argued that civil disobedience expresses the highest respect for law by holding law to the standard of justice. Do you agree with this framing?
  • Q3Candice Delmas argues citizens have duties, not merely rights, to resist unjust laws. Is this stronger claim defensible?
  • Q4Climate activism has used increasingly disruptive tactics (road blockages, art vandalism, infrastructure actions). Do these tactics advance the cause or undermine it?
  • Q5Success rates of non-violent movements have declined somewhat in the 2010s. What has changed, and what does this mean for contemporary movements?
  • Q6Public Order Acts and similar anti-protest laws have expanded in many democracies. Is this a sign of democratic decline, or reasonable regulation of public order?
  • Q7Social media has transformed protest organisation but also enables surveillance and authoritarian control. On balance, has digital technology helped or hindered democratic resistance?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Extended essay
'Almost every major expansion of rights and justice in modern history has depended on people willing to break laws.' To what extent do you agree? Write 400 to 600 words.
Skills: Thesis-driven argument on protest's historical role
Task 2 — Analytical response
Explain what Chenoweth and Stephan's research on civil resistance found, and analyse what this suggests about how change actually happens. Write 200 to 300 words.
Skills: Analytical treatment of empirical research on resistance
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Protest is only necessary in authoritarian regimes — in democracies, elections and legal channels are enough.

What to teach instead

History and current research contradict this view. In every democracy, significant expansions of rights have come through protest movements working alongside electoral politics. US civil rights law came after organised resistance, not elections alone. Women's suffrage came after suffragette campaigns, not just arguments in parliament. Labour rights, disability rights, environmental protections, LGBTQ rights — all advanced through protest movements in democracies, often against the preferences of governing majorities at the time. Elections matter but are episodic and blunt instruments; protest allows ongoing accountability between elections. Moreover, democracies can produce unjust laws and policies. Majorities can oppress minorities. Those at the margins of power may not be able to achieve change through electoral channels alone. Protest is constitutive of healthy democracy, not an alternative to it. The assumption that democracies can dispense with protest often reflects the perspective of those whose interests are well-served by existing arrangements. For those whose interests are not, protest often remains essential.

Common misconception

Violent resistance produces faster change than non-violent resistance.

What to teach instead

Chenoweth and Stephan's research on 323 major resistance campaigns found the opposite — non-violent resistance succeeds about twice as often as violent resistance, and typically more quickly in achieving its goals. The intuitive idea that violence 'gets things done' is not supported by the evidence. Violence tends to alienate potential supporters, unify opposition, invite overwhelming state response, and reduce international sympathy. Non-violence draws broader participation, maintains legitimacy, splits opponents, and attracts international pressure. Violent struggles that do succeed often produce authoritarian post-victory regimes rather than democratic ones. The 1917 Russian Revolution, violent anti-colonial struggles that led to one-party states, and many others illustrate this. Non-violent victories — Eastern Europe 1989, Philippines 1986, South Africa's post-1990 transition — more often produce working democracies. The empirical record is reasonably clear, though popular culture and media often promote the opposite impression.

Common misconception

Today's protest movements are just noise — they do not actually change anything important.

What to teach instead

This framing is contradicted by recent history. Black Lives Matter has significantly changed public conversation about race and policing, with measurable shifts in public opinion and some policy changes. #MeToo fundamentally changed cultural standards around sexual harassment. Climate movements have influenced voters, investors, corporations, and governments even as climate crisis continues. Hong Kong protests, while crushed in the short term, exposed Chinese rule to international scrutiny. Iranian Women, Life, Freedom movement continues to destabilise the regime. Change is often slow — took generations in cases like civil rights and women's suffrage. Contemporary movements operating within months or years cannot always be evaluated against historical standards of change that took decades. Moreover, 'no change' observers often ignore partial victories, defensive wins (preventing worse), and long-term shifts in what society considers acceptable. Dismissing contemporary movements as ineffective is often a way to avoid engaging with their demands.

Common misconception

Property damage during protests undermines the cause and should be condemned.

What to teach instead

The question is more complex than this framing suggests. Property damage during protests has occurred throughout history and its effects have varied. Some property damage (like the Boston Tea Party, or ANC sabotage of infrastructure during apartheid) was carefully targeted and considered justified by many. Other damage (looting, random destruction) has generally hurt movements. The distinction matters: targeted property damage aimed at symbols of injustice differs from indiscriminate destruction. Research on the 'radical flank effect' suggests that more disruptive tactics can sometimes make moderate demands appear more reasonable by comparison, helping achieve goals. On the other hand, widespread property damage alienates public opinion and provides justification for repressive response. The ethics and effectiveness vary case by case. Serious movements typically work hard to maintain discipline around violence and property damage. Reflexive condemnation of all property damage, however, misses historical cases where targeted damage has been justified response to injustice, and ignores the careful judgements serious movements have made about tactics.

Further Information

Key texts for students: Henry David Thoreau, 'Civil Disobedience' (1849). Mohandas K. Gandhi's autobiography and 'Hind Swaraj' (1909). Martin Luther King Jr., 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (1963) and 'Why We Can't Wait' (1964). Hannah Arendt, 'Civil Disobedience' (1972). John Rawls, 'A Theory of Justice' (1971), sections on civil disobedience. Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan, 'Why Civil Resistance Works' (2011). Erica Chenoweth, 'Civil Resistance: What Everyone Needs to Know' (2021). Gene Sharp, 'From Dictatorship to Democracy' (1993) — influential strategic non-violence text. Candice Delmas, 'A Duty to Resist' (2018). Howard Zinn, 'A People's History of the United States' (1980) — protest-focused history. Rebecca Solnit, 'Hope in the Dark' (2004). Taylor Branch's 'America in the King Years' trilogy on US civil rights. For Indian independence: multiple Gandhi biographies; Judith Brown's work. For US civil rights: David Garrow's 'Bearing the Cross' on King; Taylor Branch; John Lewis's 'Walking With the Wind'. For contemporary movements: Adam Kotsko and others on BLM; various climate movement analyses. Organisations: International Center on Nonviolent Conflict (nonviolent-conflict.org); Beautiful Trouble; Albert Einstein Institution. For research: Chenoweth's NAVCO data; ACLED (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project); CUSP (Civil Unrest Project). Documentaries: 'Eyes on the Prize' (US civil rights); 'A Force More Powerful' on non-violent movements. For historical archives: the Freedom of Information Act requests on surveillance; movement histories produced by participants.