‘If we burn … then what?’ A new book asks why a decade of mass protest has done so little to change things
- Written by Christopher Pollard, Tutor in Sociology and Philosophy, Deakin University
In 2010, in response to ongoing ill-treatment by police, a fruit vendor performed an act of self-immolation in Sidi Bouzid, Tunisia. This set off an uprising that led to the removal of dictator Ben Ali[1] and a process to rewrite the constitution in a democratic direction.
Inspired by this, huge demonstrations against police brutality erupted in Egypt, centred in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the protesters calling for the removal of the country’s president, Hosni Mubarak[2].
If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution – Vincent Bevins (Hachette)
These events catalysed what Vincent Bevins calls the “mass protest decade”. The years from 2010 to 2020 saw a record number of protests around the world seeking to transform societies in broadly progressive ways. Many groups were inspired by democratic ideals.
These protests were truly global. Those in Tunisia and Egypt became part of the wider uprising that came to be called the “Arab Spring[3]”.
In 2013, the Movimento Passe Livre[4] (MPL) or “Free Fare Movement” led to mass protests in Brazil. Initially directed against rises in transport fares, they rapidly expanded to include an unwieldy and contradictory set of groups and grievances.
Many other protests sprang up, including Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests in 2014, dubbed the “umbrella movement[5]” in their first phase by the global press.
Read more: Whatever Happened to the 'Arab Spring'? [6]
From bad to worse
In his new book If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution[7], Bevins starts by asking “how is it possible that so many mass protests apparently led to the opposite of what they asked for?”
The answer he provides is suggested in the book’s title, which he expands[8] as: “If we burn … then what?”