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Restrictions on the right to protest or strike, creeping surveillance and the rollback of civil liberties are exposing states’ anti-democratic tendencies. We cover the resistance, from campaigns against police corruption to movements for migrants’ rights, prison abolition, decriminalisation and more

Restrictions on the right to protest or strike, creeping surveillance and the rollback of civil liberties are exposing states’ anti-democratic tendencies. We cover the resistance, from campaigns against police corruption to movements for migrants’ rights, prison abolition, decriminalisation and more

  • Former President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaking from a podium at Columbia University

    Western warmongering serves repression in Iran

    Iranian President Ahmadinejad has failed to deliver on his 2005 election promise to ‘put the oil money on the people’s tables’. In this context, western aggression is a godsend for his regime, write Andreas Malm and Shora Esmailian

  • Protestors waiving placards denouncing the Iraq War and marching behind a banner. A woman and a policeman are in the foreground

    Defending the right to protest

    Shami Chakrabarti examines the implications of New Labour’s expansion of anti-terror laws, and what it means for the right to protest

  • Was High Court DSEi ruling aimed at stifling Bush protests?

    Activists are increasingly worried that a High Court ruling made in October has given police the green light to use anti-terrorism laws to clamp down on people’s right to peaceful protest

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