The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (April 2024) |
A protest permit or parade permit is permission granted by a governmental agency for a demonstration to be held in a particular venue at a particular time. Failing to obtain a permit may lead to charges of parading without a permit.
The requirement of a permit is sometimes denounced as an infringement of free speech,[1] by those who perceive permits as denied on spurious grounds or used to move protestors into free speech zones. Permits are sometimes denied on grounds that the protest will create a security risk.[2] A 2006 study in Mobilization said the available venues for protests were shrinking in number, citizens have experienced increasing difficulty in gaining unrestricted access to them, and such venues are no longer where most people typically congregate in large numbers.[3]
By country
editFrance
editIn May 2021, police in Paris banned any protests in favor of Palestinian nationalism, citing "risks of disturbing public order" as a result of the "particularly sensitive international context", leading Jean-Luc-Mélenchon, leader of left-wing party La France Insoumise to declare: "France is the only country where all support protests for Palestinians are forbidden, and protests against the Israeli far-right government, it is obviously to create power incidendents and stigmatise that cause". An Amnesty International spokesperson said in response: "A forbidding of a protest is legal on an international point of view only if it is motivated for a precise threat, and only if there is no other available general restriction to maintain order".[4]
United States
editIn Washington, D.C., the United States Park Police, U.S. Capitol Police, and Metropolitan Police of the District of Columbia have an elaborate permitting system.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The Interaction of State Repression, Protest Form and Protest Sponsor Strength During the Transition from Communism in Minsk, Belarus, 1990-1995, vol. 6, Mobilization: An International Quarterly, Fall 2001, pp. 129–150
- ^ D Mitchell, LA Staeheli (2005), Permitting protest: parsing the fine geography of dissent in America, International Journal of Urban
- ^ Places of Protest: The Public Forum in Principle and Practice, vol. 11, Mobilization: An International Quarterly, June 2006, pp. 229–247
- ^ "Manifestation interdite : le conflit israélo-palestinien divise la classe politique" [Forbidden demonstration: french political class divided.]. LExpress.fr (in French). 2021-05-14. Retrieved 2021-05-15.
- ^ Donatella Della Porta; Herbert Reiter, Policing protest: the control of mass demonstrations in Western democracies