Direct Action for Social Justice
The ethical case for ‘people power’
The ethical case for ‘people power’
The cathartic, catalytic power of Direct Action.
Geraldine Aves Memorial Lecture 2002, Royal Society of Arts, London, 16 January 2002
Peter Tatchell was beaten up and briefly knocked unconscious as he attempted to stage a citizen’s arrest of the Zimbabwean President, Robert Mugabe, in the lobby of the Hilton Hotel in Brussels on Monday 5 March 2001
Chief Rabbi, Cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury quizzed over “holocaust hypocrisy”
The methods of OutRage! are still necessary, justified and effective, says Peter Tatchell
The methods of OutRage! are still necessary, justified and effective, says Peter Tatchell
Peter Tatchell says direct action protests are about people taking power for themselves, instead of leaving politics to professional politicians.
Peter Tatchell reveals OutRage!’s daring attempt to arrest the President of Zimbabwe on charges of torture and other human rights abuses.
Peter Tatchell outlines the unique style of ‘protest as performance’ pioneered by the queer rights group OutRage! ‘