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Shutting down protest policing, international summitry, and the G20 experiment in Brisbane

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 01:23 authored by Binoy KampmarkBinoy Kampmark
This article considers social control mechanisms that targeted public protest at a particular summit, the Brisbane G20, first by examining the management of previous gatherings (Miami and Toronto), and then by looking at the more specific, nuanced techniques deployed in Brisbane in 2014. Despite its violence, the Toronto G20 added a few legal and policing innovations, including designated free speech zones, controlled areas of movement, and, albeit unsuccessfully, the extensive use of public relations. The lessons of Toronto were directly incorporated into the security architecture of Brisbane's policing and social control effort. Brisbane witnessed one of the more successful efforts at limiting and arguably shutting down social protest in its entirety. Protest narratives were fastidiously managed and shaped by the Queensland Police Service and affiliated agencies. As a response, alternative protest techniques, including counter-summits, were ostensibly fashioned to circumvent such a restrictive security architecture, but were marginalized in doing so.

History

Journal

Contention: The Multidisciplinary Journal of Social Protest

Volume

5

Issue

2

Start page

28

End page

49

Total pages

22

Publisher

Berghahn Books

Place published

New York and London

Language

English

Copyright

© Contention

Former Identifier

2006079336

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-12-04

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