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Occupation (protest)

As an act of protest, occupation is a strategy often used by social movements and other forms of collective social action in order to squat and hold public and symbolic spaces, buildings, critical infrastructure such as entrances to train stations, shopping centers, university buildings, squares, and parks.[1][2] Opposed to a military occupation which attempts to subdue a conquered country, a protest occupation is a means to resist the status quo and advocate a change in public policy.[3][4] Occupation attempts to use space as an instrument in order to achieve political and economic change, and to construct counter-spaces in which protesters express their desire to participate in the production and re-imagination of urban space.[3][2] Often, this is connected to the right to the city, which is the right to inhabit and be in the city as well as to redefine the city in ways that challenge the demands of capitalist accumulation.[2] That is to make public spaces more valuable to the citizens in contrast to favoring the interests of corporate and financial capital.[5]

Unlike other forms of protest like demonstrations, marches and rallies, occupation is defined by an extended temporality and is usually located in specific places.[6] In many cases local governments declare occupations illegal because protesters seek to control space over a prolonged time. As such, occupations are often in conflict with political authorities and forces of established order, especially the police.[3][7] These confrontations in particular attract media attention.[8][9]


Occupation, as a means of achieving change, emerged from worker struggles that sought everything from higher wages to the abolition of capitalism. Often called a sit-down strike, it is a form of civil disobedience in which an organized group of workers, usually employed at a factory or other centralized location, take possession of the workplace by "sitting down" at their stations, effectively preventing their employers from replacing them with strikebreakers or, in some cases, moving production to other locations.


The recovered factories in Argentina is an example of workplace occupations moving beyond addressing workplace grievances, to demanding a change in ownership of the means of production.


The Industrial Workers of the World were the first American union to use it, while the United Auto Workers staged successful sit-down strikes in the 1930s, most famously in the Flint Sit-Down Strike of 1936–1937. Sit-down strikes were declared illegal by the United States Supreme Court, but are still used by unions such as the UMWA in the Pittston strike, and the workers at the Republic Windows and Doors factory in Chicago.


The Occupy Wall Street movement, inspired amongst others by the Arab Spring and the Indignados movement of Spain, started a global movement in which the occupation of public spaces is a key tactic. During these protests in 2011, the tactic of occupation was used in a new way as protesters wanted to remain indefinitely until they were heard, resisting police and government officials who wanted to evict them. In contrast to earlier protest encampments these occupations mobilized more people during a longer time period in more cities. This gained them worldwide attention.[3]

including ongoing student occupations of university buildings in protest of the marketisation of higher education

2023 University of Manchester protests

2023 storming of the Praça dos Três Poderes

in the Oakland Unified School District, Oakland, California; 130-day occupation of an OUSD school to protest its closure

2022 Parker K-8 Occupation

across Canada

Freedom Convoy 2022

in the U.S. state of Minnesota

2021 Uptown Minneapolis unrest

2021 following police brutality in Austin, Texas, United States

Orisha Land

2021 storming of the United States Capitol

2020 (CHAZ) following the George Floyd protests in the U.S. city of Seattle

Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone

2020–present in the U.S. city of Minneapolis

George Floyd Square occupied protest

2018 . Student occupations took place on over 20 UK university campuses and the UUK London Offices in support of the 4-week UCU national strike over a pensions dispute. Some occupations lasted for over a month and continued after the strike had ended, calling for an end to the neo-liberalisation and marketisation of higher education and in support of the rights of low-income workers at universities such as cleaners and security guards.[10]

UCU Strike Solidarity Occupations

2015 ,[11] a six-week occupation against the neoliberalisation of LSE and the UK Higher Education system.

Occupy LSE

a protest against budget cuts and for more democracy in the university.

2015 University of Amsterdam Bungehuis and Maagdenhuis Occupations

an occupation protest for universal suffrage in Hong Kong in 2014

2014 Hong Kong protests

The occupation of the of Republic of China (Taiwan) in 2014 as part of the Sunflower Student Movement.

Legislative Yuan

The several massive occupations of unproductive land in Brazil by the largest mass movement of the world, the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, from 1973 up to now.

[12]

The

2011–2012 Spanish protests

The occupation of the in Madison, Wisconsin in February 2011 as part of the 2011 Wisconsin protests over labor rights, a precursor to the Occupy Wall Street movement.

Wisconsin State Capitol

which helped spawn the worldwide Occupy movement

Occupy Wall Street

during the 2011 Egyptian revolution

Tahrir Square

The occupation of some university buildings in the UK in November 2010 and early 2011 in response to cuts by the coalition Conservative-Liberal Democrat government including those to public services, welfare handouts and all levels of education (notably the increase of tuition fees in combination to funding cuts).[14][15][16]

[13]

The tent city known as "Democracy Village" erected in in London, in 2010.

Parliament Square

The wave of Student Occupations at universities in the UK in early 2009.[18]

[17]

The occupations of university buildings during the .

2009 California college tuition hike protests

The flux of student occupations at universities in over the 2008-9 year, including NYU and The New School.

New York City

The February 2008 occupation of by the Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers after the largest home invasion in South Africa's history. Residents occupied the main thoroughfare for 1 year and 9 months.

Symphony Way

The occupation of for 150 days during the 2006 Oaxaca protests.

Oaxaca City

The 2005

Cedar Revolution

The 2001

Central University of Venezuela rectorate takeover

The 1990

Wild Lily student movement

The .

Tiananmen Square protests of 1989

The in England which began protesting the placement of nuclear-armed cruise missiles in 1981.

Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp

The occupation at Wounded Knee, South Dakota (1973)

American Indian Movement

The by American Indians.

1969 occupation of Alcatraz

The of City College by a group consisting largely of Black and Puerto Rican students that demanded and won open admissions at CUNY.

1969 occupation

The 1969 in Montreal.

student occupation of the computer centre at Sir George Williams University

The .

1968 Columbia Student Strike

The 1968 , organized (shortly before his assassination) by Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference occupation of the National Mall.

Poor People's Campaign

May 13, 1968 - at the Sorbonne University in Paris

Sorbonne Occupation Committee

March 22, 1968 - Occupation of Nanterre University

Movement of 22 March

The 1936-37 , in Flint, Michigan.

GM Sit-Down Strike

The 1932 occupation camp of World War I veterans and their families in Washington, D.C.

Bonus Army

conducted on disputed territory such as at Camp Humphreys

Peace camps

Sit-down strikes

Sit-ins

Squatting