Everything about Direct Action totally explained
Direct action is a form of political
activism which seeks immediate remedy for perceived ills, as opposed to
indirect actions such as
electing representatives who promise to provide remedy at some later date.
Direct action can include nonviolent and violent activities, with a blurred intermediate area of attacks on properties. Nonviolent activities include
strikes,
workplace occupations,
sit-ins,
demonstrations,
sabotage,
vandalism and
graffiti. More violent actions include
revolutionary/
guerrilla warfare. Direct actions are often (but not always) a form of
civil disobedience and thus often violate
criminal law. For example, vandalism is illegal, while demonstrations are usually not illegal in most constitutional democracies. Less confrontational forms of this definition of direct action include establishing radical
social centers, and performing
street theatre.
Utilizing resources within their power, direct action participants aim to either:
- obstruct another political agent or political organization from performing some practice to which the activists object; or,
- solve problems major societal institutions (businesses, governments, powerful churches or establishment unions) are not addressing.
Some direct action participants engage in "indirect actions" (voting in
elections, targeted
boycotts) as part of larger campaigns.
History
Direct action tactics have been around for as long as conflicts have existed, but the theory of direct action developed primarily in the context of labor struggles. In his 1920 book,
Direct Action,
William Mellor placed direct action firmly in the struggle between worker and employer for control "over the economic life of society." Mellor defined direct action "as the use of some form of economic
power for securing of ends desired by those who possess that power." Mellor considered direct action a tool of both owners and workers and for this reason he included within his definition
lockouts and
cartels, as well as strikes and sabotage. However, by this time the American anarchist and feminist
Voltairine de Cleyre had already given a strong defense of direct action, linking it with struggles for civil rights:
» "the
Salvation Army, which was started by a gentleman named Bob Luker was vigorously practising direct action in the maintenance of the freedom of its members to speak, assemble, and pray. Over and over they were arrested, fined, and imprisoned ... till they finally compelled their persecutors to let them alone." (de Cleyre, undated)
By the middle of the
20th century, the sphere of direct action had undoubtedly expanded, though the meaning of the term had perhaps contracted. Most campaigns for social change—notably those seeking
suffrage, improved working conditions,
civil rights,
abortion rights, an end to gentrification,and environmental protection—employ at least some types of violent or nonviolent direct action.
The
anti-nuclear movement used direct action, particularly during the
1980s. Groups opposing the introduction of
cruise missiles into the
United Kingdom employed tactics such as breaking into and occupying
United States air bases, and blocking roads to prevent the movement of military convoys and disrupt military projects. In the U.S., mass protests opposed nuclear energy, weapons, and military intervention throughout the decade, resulting in thousands of arrests. Many groups also set up semi-permanent "
peace camps" outside air bases such as
Molesworth and
Greenham Common, and at the
Nevada Test Site.
Anti-globalization activists made headlines around the world in 1999, when they forced the Seattle
WTO Ministerial Conference of 1999 to end early with direct action tactics such as blocking traffic and destroying property.
One of the largest direct actions in recent years took place in San Francisco the day after the
Iraq War began in 2003. Twenty-thousand people occupied the streets and over 2,000 people were arrested in
affinity group actions throughout downtown San Francisco, home to military-related corporations such as
Bechtel. (See
March 20, 2003 anti-war protest).
Direct action has also been used on a smaller scale. Refugee
Salim Rambo was saved from being flown from the UK back to the
Democratic Republic of the Congo when one person stood up on his flight and refused to sit down. After a two hour delay the man was arrested, but the pilot refused to fly with Rambo on board. Salim Rambo was ultimately released from state custody and remains free today.
Nonviolent direct action
Nonviolent direct action is any form of direct action that doesn't rely on violent tactics.
Mahatma Gandhi's teachings of
Satyagraha (or
truth force) have inspired many practitioners of nonviolent direct action (NVDA), although the use of nonviolence doesn't always imply an ideological commitment to pacifism. In
1963, civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr. described the goal of NVDA in his
Letter from Birmingham Jail:
"Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored."
One major debate is whether destruction of property can be included within the realm of nonviolence. This debate can be illustrated by the response to groups like the
Earth Liberation Front and
Animal Liberation Front, which use property destruction and sabotage as direct action tactics. Although these types of actions are often viewed as a form of violence, supporters define violence as harm directed towards living things and not property.
In the U.S., the term has come to signify
civil disobedience, and protest in general, particularly where the organizers are not concerned with preventing violence. In the 1980s, a California direct action protest group called
Livermore Action Group called its newspaper
Direct Action. The paper ran for 25 issues, and covered hundreds of nonviolent actions around the world. The book
Direct Action: An Historical Novel took its name from this paper, and records dozens of actions in the San Francisco Bay Area.
"Direct Action" has also served as the moniker of at least two groups: the
French Action Directe as well as the
Canadian group more popularly known as the
Squamish Five.
Direct Action was also the name of the magazine of the Australian
Wobblies. The
UK's Solidarity Federation currently publishes a magazine called
Direct Action.
Direct action and anarchism
As a principle, direct action is central to
autonomism and many strands of
anarchist theory, including
anarcho-syndicalism,
anarcho-communism,
insurrectionary anarchism,
green anarchism,
anarcho-primitivism and
anarcho-pacifism.
United Kingdom
The
Environmental direct action movement in the
United Kingdom started in 1990 with the forming of the first UK
Earth First! group. The movement rapidly grew from the 1992
Twyford Down protests, culminating in 1997.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Direct Action'.
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