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Reclaim the Streets

Reclaim the Streets also known as RTS, are a collective with a shared ideal of community ownership of public spaces. Participants characterise the collective as a resistance movement opposed to the dominance of corporate forces in globalisation, and to the car as the dominant mode of transport.

Reclaim the Streets
Founded1995
Founded atLondon, United Kingdom
TypeResistance movement
Focusstreet reclaiming, Environmentalism
Location
  • Worldwide
MethodDirect action

Reclaim the Streets often stage non-violent direct action street reclaiming events such as the 'invasion' of a major road, highway or motorway to stage a party. While this may obstruct the regular users of these spaces such as car drivers and public bus riders, the philosophy of RTS is that it is vehicle traffic, not pedestrians, who are causing the obstruction, and that by occupying the road they are in fact opening up public space. The events are usually spectacular and colourful, with sand pits for children to play in, free food and music. At a minority of events, where the police have tried to violently shut down the event there has been violence between protestors and police.[1]

Reclaim The Streets was originally formed by Earth First![2]

Past actions edit

UK edit

  • Camden High Street, 14 May 1995. The first major RTS street party action took over a busy London street and closed it to motor-traffic for an afternoon. Around 500 people took over the street. There was free food served from tables in the middle of the road, and music played from a bicycle-powered sound system. A climbing frame was placed in the midde of a crossroad junction and children were able to play on it.[3] The action met on the high street in the afternoon and left from the Rainbow Centre, a squatted Church in Kentish Town.
  • Upper Street, Islington, 23 July 1995. Three thousand people party at another busy traffic junction. Banners are stretched between lampposts, with messages such as ‘STREET NOW OPEN’ and ‘CAR FREE’.[4] There is a sound system as well as a live band that uses a bus stop as a stage. Kids play in a hastily constructed sandpit.
  • Birmingham, 6 August 1995.[5] Organised with a handful of people around 200 people turn up for family afternoon with live band playing from the back of a truck. To prevent police using riot tactics to clear the street at the end, a procession with music and dancing headed off down the road to a pub.
  • Brighton, 14 February 1996. Protest publicised in part by Justice? & SchNEWS closes a section of the North Laine area of Brighton. A bouncy castle is erected in a crossing and traffic is stopped for most of the afternoon.
  • M41 Motorway, Shepherd's Bush, London. 13 July 1996. After a cat-and-mouse game with the police, 6,000 protestors take over part of the elevated motorway. Many sound-systems play, one of which is carried on a truck that was parked on the hard shoulder.[6] Hidden underneath dancers walking on stilts and wearing huge, wire-supported dresses, environmental activists drill holes in the tarmac and plant trees.[7][8] The party continued into the next morning.
  • Pershore Road, Birmingham, 17 August 1996[5]
  • Mill Road, Cambridge, Saturday 14 September 1996[9]
  • Reclaim the Future, Liverpool, Saturday 28 September 1996[10]
  • Cowley Road, Oxford Thursday 31 October 1996[11] - Afternoon and evening party which began when sound systems on lorries stopped traffic using Cowley Road between around Divinity Road and Rectory Road
  • Trafalgar Square, 12 April 1997. The 'Never Mind The Ballots' protest against the forthcoming general election. A march with the sacked Liverpool dockers started at Kennington Park and ended up at Trafalgar Square in the centre of London.[12][13]
  • Brixton Road, Brixton and High Road, Seven Sisters, 6 June 1998. Two street reclamations in one day, with an estimated 5,000 people at each party.
  • Grassmarket, Edinburgh, 11 August 1997[14]
  • Bank Underground station, London, 13 July 1998. To show support for London Underground workers striking resisting privatisation, activists shut down the Central line by climbing on a train in the morning rush-hour and unfurled a larger banner at the station entrance.
  • Global Street Party! Birmingham Bullring, 16th May 1998
  • Toxic Planet at 173 Upper Street, London (opposite Islington Town Hall), 4–11 October 1998.
  • Tube party, 1 May 1999.
  • Carnival Against Capital: 18 June 1999. A global day of action. In London the financial district is targeted. The LIFFE building is stormed.
  • Seattle Solidarity Action, Euston Station, London. 30 November 1999. The World Trade Organization was meeting in Seattle and met with concerted protest.
  • No Blood For Oil. 3 February 2000. A solidarity action in support of the U'wa people of Colombia.
  • Guerilla Gardening. 1 May 2000. An expressly non-violent gardening action at Parliament Square.
  • Action to mark the introduction of the Terrorism Act. 19 February 2001.
  • Bye Bye Planet. 19 April 2001. An action at the Natural History Museum protested at the perceived greenwash and corporate rebranding of BP by subverting an exhibition about climate change which was sponsored by BP.
  • Business Class Tube launched. 5 June 2001. 50 trains receive stickers announcing a new Cattle Class.[15][16]
  • Free shop at a May Day event. 1 May 2002
  • Reclaim the Future. 11–22 September 2002.
  • Street party against arms trade. 10 September 2003.

Worldwide edit

  • February 1998 Sydney.[17]
  • April 1998 Amsterdam.
  • April 1998 Bielefeld, Germany.
  • May 1998 Global Street Party!; Arcata, California; Berkeley, California; Athens, Greece; Birmingham and York, England; Bogotá, Colombia; Brisbane, Melbourne and Darwin, Australia; Dresden and Berlin, Germany; Geneva, Switzerland; Ljubljana, Slovenia; Lyon, France; Prague, Czech Republic; Stockholm, Sweden; Tallinn, Estonia; Tel Aviv, Israel; Toronto, Canada; Turku, Finland; Utrecht, Netherlands; Valencia, Spain; Vancouver, Canada.
  • July 1998 Helsinki.
  • August 1998 Jyväskylä.
  • September 1998 Berlin.
  • October 1998 Broadway, New York City.
  • April 1999 New York City: Avenue A. Reclaim the Streets and Turn them into Gardens.
  • April 1999 Berlin.
  • May 1999 Turku, Finland; late May 1999 Brussels, Belgium.
  • June 1999 Global carnival against capital; London; Scotland; Nigeria; Czech Republic; Los Angeles; (Germany); Australia; Barcelona in 18 June; New York City.
  • July 1999 Tampere, Finland.
  • July 1999 Helsinki.
  • September 1999 Berlin.
  • September 1999 Stockholm.
  • All over the place: N30; Seattle, WA/USA: N30 and today's Seattle Indymedia; London (and commentary; Geneva, Switzerland 16 and 27 Nov; New Delhi; Manila, Philippines 24 Nov; Athens; New York City 26 Nov; Padua, Italy 27 Nov; Milan, Italy 27 Nov; presque toute la France; Brisbane, Australia; Cardiff & Bangor, Wales; Halifax, England; Leeds, England; Manchester, England; Totnes, England; Iceland; Narmada, India; Bangalore, India; Schiphol/Amsterdam, Netherlands; Berlin, Germany; Rome, Italy; Long Beach, CA/USA; Baltimore, MD/USA; Tel Aviv, Israel; Nashville, TN/USA; Washington DC/USA.
  • 9 March 2000 Barcelona, Spain.
  • 1 May 2000 Beverly Hills, California, USA.
  • May 2000 Helsinki.
  • May 2000 Turku, Finland.
  • July 2000 Joensuu, Finland.
  • September 2000 Naperville, Illinois.
  • September 2000 Brussels.
  • September 2000 Prague: S26 at the World Bank / International Monetary Fund.
  • November 2000 Den Haag, Netherlands: Rising Tide (etc.) protests at the UN climate talks.
  • December 2000 Nice: European Summit (indymedia reports: more a joined-up-Europe than a UK thang?).
  • January 2001 Davos: World Economic Forum demonstrations.
  • 24 Feb – 12 March 2001 Chiapas – Mexico City: the Zapatour.
  • March 2001 Adelaide, Australia.
  • April 2001 Quebec City: Anti-capitalist Carnival, welcoming in the spring (and shaking down the Free Trade-touting "Americas Summit"): www.quebec2001.net
  • April 2001 Everywhere (mostly Nordic) Operation Dessert Storm.
  • May 2001 All over – MayDay. RTS in crèche shock! statement; and see indymedia.
  • May 2001 Thessaloniki, Greece.
  • May 2001 Helsinki.
  • May 2001 Prague.
  • May 2001 Asheville, North Carolina.
  • June 2001 Brno, Czech Republic.
  • June 2001 Bratislava, Slovakia.
  • July 2001 Bonn, Germany at climate conference.
  • July 2001 Naperville, Illinois.
  • August 2001 Turku, Finland.
  • August 2001 Seattle.
  • September 2001 Leuven, Belgium.
  • September 2001 Cochabamba, Bolivia: PGA gathering.
  • 25 September 2001 Cochabamba, Bolivia Magical Mystery tour.
  • October 2001 Ghent, Belgium.
  • November 2001 widespread actions coinciding with the World Trade Organization Doha Declaration.
  • December 2001 Sydney.
  • December 2001 Brussels.
  • March 2002 Summit of the European Council Barcelona.
  • March 2002 Active Fair (street party) Sydney.
  • April 2002 Seattle Street Party.
  • April 2002 Gap, France.
  • April 2002 Paris.
  • May 2002 Dublin
  • May 2002 Lahti, Finland.
  • May 2002 Liège, Belgium.
  • May 2002 Lyon, France.
  • July 2002 Helsinki.
  • August 2002 Zürich.
  • May 2003 Dublin
  • Sept 2003 Melbourne.
  • Sept 2003 Brisbane, Canberra & Sydney.
  • Sept 2003 Wellington, New Zealand.
  • May 2004 Dublin. Part of a 'No Borders' weekend of protest, which led to some violence
  • December 2006 – Protest against demolition of the 1957 Star Ferry Pier, Central, Hong Kong.
  • May 2007 – Protest against demolition of the 1953 Queen's Pier, Central, Hong Kong.
  • Mar – Apr 2008 – Performance art competition against the privatisation of public area in front of Times Square (Hong Kong), Causeway Bay, Hong Kong.
  • Apr 2008 Amsterdam – protest for free space and a performance from a truck driving through the streets of Amsterdam.
  • 31 May 2008 San Francisco – Street party against Prop 98.[18]
  • 1 September 2008 Limoilou, Quebec, Canada.
  • 19 September 2008, Malmö, Sweden.
  • 16 June 2009, Helsinki, Finland.
  • 6 February 2010, Zürich.
  • August 2011, Jyväskylä, Finland.
  • 7 August 2011, Helsinki, Finland.
  • 10 June 2012, Brussels, Belgium. 3,000 people participated in a disobedient Pic Nic to Reclaim The Streets.
  • 6 September 2014, Sydney, Australia.[19]
  • November 2014, India (Delhi, Mumbai) Raahgiri (Our Streets, Our Freedom) Sponsored by various media partners.[20]
  • 13 December 2014, Sydney, Australia – Against the Westconnex Motorway.[21]
  • 1 February 2015, Sydney, Australia – King Street Crawl Against the Westconnex Motorway.[22]
  • 13 September 2015, Sydney, Australia – 99 Reasons To Dance.[23]
  • 12 December 2015, Sydney, Australia – A Liveable City For All.[24]
  • 19 March 2016, Sydney, Australia – Against The Star Casino.[25]
  • 23 April 2016, Sydney, Australia – Keep Newtown Weird and Safe.[26]
  • 18 June 2016, Sydney, Australia – Broke But Not Broken.[27]
  • 2 October 2016, Sydney, Australia – Save Sydney Park.[28]
  • 19 March 2017, Sydney, Australia – Keep Newtown Weird and Safe.[29]
  • 23 September 2017, Sydney, Australia – Signed Sealed Delivered.[30]
  • 15 November 2017, Sydney, Australia – Love Triumphant.[31]
  • 22 April 2018, Sydney, Australia - Keep Newtown Weird and Safe.[32]
  • 22 July 2018, Sydney, Australia - Ruff Justice: Sniffer Dog Protest Festival.[33]
  • 19 January 2019, Sydney, Australia - Demand Action: Pill Testing Saves Lives.[34]
  • 23 November 2019, Sydney, Australia - Dance In Defiance: Street Party for Pill Testing! [35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Klein, Naomi. No Logo. Toronto : A.A Knopf Canada. 2000. ISBN 0-676-97282-9
  2. ^ Wall, Derek. Earth First and the Anti-Roads Movement. London: Routledge. 1999. ISBN 0-415-19064-9
  3. ^ McKay, George (1998). DiY Culture: Party & Protest in Nineties Britain. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-878-4.
  4. ^ McKay, George (1998). DiY Culture: Party & Protest in Nineties Britain. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-878-4.
  5. ^ a b "RTS: Street Party report - 6 August 95 (Birmingham)". rts.gn.apc.org. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  6. ^ McKay, George (17 July 1998). DiY Culture: Party and Protest in Nineties' Britain. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-260-7.
  7. ^ "RTS: Street Party report - 13 July 96 (London)". rts.gn.apc.org. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  8. ^ "M41 Motorway Reclaim the Streets report, Shepherd's Bush, 13th July 1996". www.urban75.org. 1996. Retrieved 29 January 2019. It isn't a protest against anything. It is a celebration of the potential of freedom, of diversity, of an ecological society, of a free society. It is not a protest against the car - we use that as a symbol. (from video)
  9. ^ "Reclaim The Streets". Camcycle - Cambridge Cycling Campaign. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  10. ^ "Lockout 1st Anniversary demonstration". www.labournet.net. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  11. ^ "RTS Action Archive". rts.gn.apc.org. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  12. ^ "RTS commentary". rts.gn.apc.org. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  13. ^ "Never Mind The Ballots - Reclaim The Streets and sacked Liverpool Dockers Social Justice March, Trafalgar Square, London 12th April 1997". www.urban75.org. 1997. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  14. ^ "Report Reclaim the Streets, 11 August 1997 (Edinburgh)". www.j12.org. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  15. ^ Makepeace, Jo (5 June 2001). "Business Class Tube launched in London". www.indymedia.org.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  16. ^ "Business Class Tube". rts.gn.apc.org. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  17. ^ "reclaim the streets: oxford/sydney 97/98". www.urban75.com. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  18. ^ "SF Reclaim the Streets Opposes Proposition 98". Indybay.org. 31 May 2008
  19. ^ "Reclaim The Streets returns to Sydney in 2014 - Ohms not Bombs", 6 September 2014
  20. ^ "Raahgiri Day | About". Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  21. ^ "Street festival headlined by DJ Paul Mac being held to protest against WestConnex", The Daily Telegraph, 27 November 2014
  22. ^ "WestConnex motorway protest brings 3000 people to King St, Newtown", The Daily Telegraph, 2 February 2015
  23. ^ "Reclaim the Streets protest hits Sydney’s CBD", News, 13 September 2015
  24. ^ "If they shut down our dance floors, we'll dance on the streets: Newtown residents protest lockouts and WestConnex", Sydney Morning Herald, 12 December 2015
  25. ^ "Anti-Lockouts Protesters End March By Dumping Giant Turd On The Steps Of “Star Shtty” Casino", Music Feeds 20 March 2016
  26. ^ "Keepin it weird in Newtown", City Hub, 28 April 2016
  27. ^ "Broke But Not Broken? Sydney’s Street Protests Continue", Howl and Echoes, 20 June 2016
  28. ^ "Protestival for Sydney Park", City Hub, 5 October 2016
  29. ^ "Newtown reclaims its streets", City Hub, 22 March 2017
  30. ^ "Signed, Sealed, Delivered – Music Festival for Marriage Equality", City Hub, 14 September 2017
  31. ^ "Oxford Street party to go ahead after Yes court battle with police", The Australian, 13 November 2017
  32. ^ "Meet the local organisations trying to keep the Newtown vibe alive", The Quo, 1 April 2018
  33. ^ "Ruff Justice: Reclaim the Streets sets date for next protest", Avaredman.net 25 April 2018
  34. ^ "'Enough of the politics': Pill testing supporters rally in Sydney", The Sydney Morning Herald, 19 January 2019
  35. ^ Facebook Event

Further reading edit

  • Wall, Derek Earth First and the Anti-Roads Movement: Radical Environmentalism and Comparative Social Movements London: Routledge, 1999. ISBN 0-415-19064-9
  • Mosey, Chris Car Wars – Battles on the Road to Nowhere London: Vision Paperbacks, 2000. ISBN 1-901250-40-7
  • St John, Graham. 2009. Technomad: Global Raving Countercultures. Equinox Publishing (UK). ISBN 978-1-84553-625-1
  • Ramírez-Blanco, Julia, "Reclaim the Streets! From Local to Global Party Protest", Third Text, 4, special issue, Global Occupations of Art, July, 2013

External links edit

  • Reclaim The Streets (London)
  • "Reclaim the Streets - The Film (reloaded)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Today the word on the street is 'Occupy'. This is how we used to do it in the 90's... - Documentary about RTS
  • Car Busters Magazine is published four times a year by the World Carfree Network
  • Reclaim the Streets - 7 March 1999, Sydney
  • urban75 - Reclaim The Streets reports and photos - RTS articles, 1996 onwards

reclaim, streets, confused, with, reclaim, night, reclaim, these, streets, also, known, collective, with, shared, ideal, community, ownership, public, spaces, participants, characterise, collective, resistance, movement, opposed, dominance, corporate, forces, . Not to be confused with Reclaim the Night or Reclaim These Streets Reclaim the Streets also known as RTS are a collective with a shared ideal of community ownership of public spaces Participants characterise the collective as a resistance movement opposed to the dominance of corporate forces in globalisation and to the car as the dominant mode of transport Reclaim the StreetsFounded1995Founded atLondon United KingdomTypeResistance movementFocusstreet reclaiming EnvironmentalismLocationWorldwideMethodDirect actionReclaim the Streets often stage non violent direct action street reclaiming events such as the invasion of a major road highway or motorway to stage a party While this may obstruct the regular users of these spaces such as car drivers and public bus riders the philosophy of RTS is that it is vehicle traffic not pedestrians who are causing the obstruction and that by occupying the road they are in fact opening up public space The events are usually spectacular and colourful with sand pits for children to play in free food and music At a minority of events where the police have tried to violently shut down the event there has been violence between protestors and police 1 Reclaim The Streets was originally formed by Earth First 2 Contents 1 Past actions 1 1 UK 1 2 Worldwide 2 See also 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksPast actions editUK edit Camden High Street 14 May 1995 The first major RTS street party action took over a busy London street and closed it to motor traffic for an afternoon Around 500 people took over the street There was free food served from tables in the middle of the road and music played from a bicycle powered sound system A climbing frame was placed in the midde of a crossroad junction and children were able to play on it 3 The action met on the high street in the afternoon and left from the Rainbow Centre a squatted Church in Kentish Town Upper Street Islington 23 July 1995 Three thousand people party at another busy traffic junction Banners are stretched between lampposts with messages such as STREET NOW OPEN and CAR FREE 4 There is a sound system as well as a live band that uses a bus stop as a stage Kids play in a hastily constructed sandpit Birmingham 6 August 1995 5 Organised with a handful of people around 200 people turn up for family afternoon with live band playing from the back of a truck To prevent police using riot tactics to clear the street at the end a procession with music and dancing headed off down the road to a pub Brighton 14 February 1996 Protest publicised in part by Justice amp SchNEWS closes a section of the North Laine area of Brighton A bouncy castle is erected in a crossing and traffic is stopped for most of the afternoon M41 Motorway Shepherd s Bush London 13 July 1996 After a cat and mouse game with the police 6 000 protestors take over part of the elevated motorway Many sound systems play one of which is carried on a truck that was parked on the hard shoulder 6 Hidden underneath dancers walking on stilts and wearing huge wire supported dresses environmental activists drill holes in the tarmac and plant trees 7 8 The party continued into the next morning Pershore Road Birmingham 17 August 1996 5 Mill Road Cambridge Saturday 14 September 1996 9 Reclaim the Future Liverpool Saturday 28 September 1996 10 Cowley Road Oxford Thursday 31 October 1996 11 Afternoon and evening party which began when sound systems on lorries stopped traffic using Cowley Road between around Divinity Road and Rectory Road Trafalgar Square 12 April 1997 The Never Mind The Ballots protest against the forthcoming general election A march with the sacked Liverpool dockers started at Kennington Park and ended up at Trafalgar Square in the centre of London 12 13 Brixton Road Brixton and High Road Seven Sisters 6 June 1998 Two street reclamations in one day with an estimated 5 000 people at each party Grassmarket Edinburgh 11 August 1997 14 Bank Underground station London 13 July 1998 To show support for London Underground workers striking resisting privatisation activists shut down the Central line by climbing on a train in the morning rush hour and unfurled a larger banner at the station entrance Global Street Party Birmingham Bullring 16th May 1998 Toxic Planet at 173 Upper Street London opposite Islington Town Hall 4 11 October 1998 Tube party 1 May 1999 Carnival Against Capital 18 June 1999 A global day of action In London the financial district is targeted The LIFFE building is stormed Seattle Solidarity Action Euston Station London 30 November 1999 The World Trade Organization was meeting in Seattle and met with concerted protest No Blood For Oil 3 February 2000 A solidarity action in support of the U wa people of Colombia Guerilla Gardening 1 May 2000 An expressly non violent gardening action at Parliament Square Action to mark the introduction of the Terrorism Act 19 February 2001 Bye Bye Planet 19 April 2001 An action at the Natural History Museum protested at the perceived greenwash and corporate rebranding of BP by subverting an exhibition about climate change which was sponsored by BP Business Class Tube launched 5 June 2001 50 trains receive stickers announcing a new Cattle Class 15 16 Free shop at a May Day event 1 May 2002 Reclaim the Future 11 22 September 2002 Street party against arms trade 10 September 2003 Worldwide edit February 1998 Sydney 17 April 1998 Amsterdam April 1998 Bielefeld Germany May 1998 Global Street Party Arcata California Berkeley California Athens Greece Birmingham and York England Bogota Colombia Brisbane Melbourne and Darwin Australia Dresden and Berlin Germany Geneva Switzerland Ljubljana Slovenia Lyon France Prague Czech Republic Stockholm Sweden Tallinn Estonia Tel Aviv Israel Toronto Canada Turku Finland Utrecht Netherlands Valencia Spain Vancouver Canada July 1998 Helsinki August 1998 Jyvaskyla September 1998 Berlin October 1998 Broadway New York City April 1999 New York City Avenue A Reclaim the Streets and Turn them into Gardens April 1999 Berlin May 1999 Turku Finland late May 1999 Brussels Belgium June 1999 Global carnival against capital London Scotland Nigeria Czech Republic Los Angeles Germany Australia Barcelona in 18 June New York City July 1999 Tampere Finland July 1999 Helsinki September 1999 Berlin September 1999 Stockholm All over the place N30 Seattle WA USA N30 and today s Seattle Indymedia London and commentary Geneva Switzerland 16 and 27 Nov New Delhi Manila Philippines 24 Nov Athens New York City 26 Nov Padua Italy 27 Nov Milan Italy 27 Nov presque toute la France Brisbane Australia Cardiff amp Bangor Wales Halifax England Leeds England Manchester England Totnes England Iceland Narmada India Bangalore India Schiphol Amsterdam Netherlands Berlin Germany Rome Italy Long Beach CA USA Baltimore MD USA Tel Aviv Israel Nashville TN USA Washington DC USA 9 March 2000 Barcelona Spain 1 May 2000 Beverly Hills California USA May 2000 Helsinki May 2000 Turku Finland July 2000 Joensuu Finland September 2000 Naperville Illinois September 2000 Brussels September 2000 Prague S26 at the World Bank International Monetary Fund November 2000 Den Haag Netherlands Rising Tide etc protests at the UN climate talks December 2000 Nice European Summit indymedia reports more a joined up Europe than a UK thang January 2001 Davos World Economic Forum demonstrations 24 Feb 12 March 2001 Chiapas Mexico City the Zapatour March 2001 Adelaide Australia April 2001 Quebec City Anti capitalist Carnival welcoming in the spring and shaking down the Free Trade touting Americas Summit www quebec2001 net April 2001 Everywhere mostly Nordic Operation Dessert Storm May 2001 All over MayDay RTS in creche shock statement and see indymedia May 2001 Thessaloniki Greece May 2001 Helsinki May 2001 Prague May 2001 Asheville North Carolina June 2001 Brno Czech Republic June 2001 Bratislava Slovakia July 2001 Bonn Germany at climate conference July 2001 Naperville Illinois August 2001 Turku Finland August 2001 Seattle September 2001 Leuven Belgium September 2001 Cochabamba Bolivia PGA gathering 25 September 2001 Cochabamba Bolivia Magical Mystery tour October 2001 Ghent Belgium November 2001 widespread actions coinciding with the World Trade Organization Doha Declaration December 2001 Sydney December 2001 Brussels March 2002 Summit of the European Council Barcelona March 2002 Active Fair street party Sydney April 2002 Seattle Street Party April 2002 Gap France April 2002 Paris May 2002 Dublin May 2002 Lahti Finland May 2002 Liege Belgium May 2002 Lyon France July 2002 Helsinki August 2002 Zurich May 2003 Dublin Sept 2003 Melbourne Sept 2003 Brisbane Canberra amp Sydney Sept 2003 Wellington New Zealand May 2004 Dublin Part of a No Borders weekend of protest which led to some violence December 2006 Protest against demolition of the 1957 Star Ferry Pier Central Hong Kong May 2007 Protest against demolition of the 1953 Queen s Pier Central Hong Kong Mar Apr 2008 Performance art competition against the privatisation of public area in front of Times Square Hong Kong Causeway Bay Hong Kong Apr 2008 Amsterdam protest for free space and a performance from a truck driving through the streets of Amsterdam 31 May 2008 San Francisco Street party against Prop 98 18 1 September 2008 Limoilou Quebec Canada 19 September 2008 Malmo Sweden 16 June 2009 Helsinki Finland 6 February 2010 Zurich August 2011 Jyvaskyla Finland 7 August 2011 Helsinki Finland 10 June 2012 Brussels Belgium 3 000 people participated in a disobedient Pic Nic to Reclaim The Streets 6 September 2014 Sydney Australia 19 November 2014 India Delhi Mumbai Raahgiri Our Streets Our Freedom Sponsored by various media partners 20 13 December 2014 Sydney Australia Against the Westconnex Motorway 21 1 February 2015 Sydney Australia King Street Crawl Against the Westconnex Motorway 22 13 September 2015 Sydney Australia 99 Reasons To Dance 23 12 December 2015 Sydney Australia A Liveable City For All 24 19 March 2016 Sydney Australia Against The Star Casino 25 23 April 2016 Sydney Australia Keep Newtown Weird and Safe 26 18 June 2016 Sydney Australia Broke But Not Broken 27 2 October 2016 Sydney Australia Save Sydney Park 28 19 March 2017 Sydney Australia Keep Newtown Weird and Safe 29 23 September 2017 Sydney Australia Signed Sealed Delivered 30 15 November 2017 Sydney Australia Love Triumphant 31 22 April 2018 Sydney Australia Keep Newtown Weird and Safe 32 22 July 2018 Sydney Australia Ruff Justice Sniffer Dog Protest Festival 33 19 January 2019 Sydney Australia Demand Action Pill Testing Saves Lives 34 23 November 2019 Sydney Australia Dance In Defiance Street Party for Pill Testing 35 See also editCarfree city Car free movement Carnival Against Capital Critical Mass cycling Cycling infrastructure Green infrastructure Living street Traffic calming in spaces shared between road users Living Streets UK UK charity for everyday walking M11 link road protest SchNEWS Stop the City 1983 4 UK demonstrations against the military financial complex Time s Up Environmental organization in New York United States Walkability World Naked Bike RideReferences edit Klein Naomi No Logo Toronto A A Knopf Canada 2000 ISBN 0 676 97282 9 Wall Derek Earth First and the Anti Roads Movement London Routledge 1999 ISBN 0 415 19064 9 McKay George 1998 DiY Culture Party amp Protest in Nineties Britain Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 878 4 McKay George 1998 DiY Culture Party amp Protest in Nineties Britain Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 878 4 a b RTS Street Party report 6 August 95 Birmingham rts gn apc org Retrieved 15 October 2018 McKay George 17 July 1998 DiY Culture Party and Protest in Nineties Britain Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 260 7 RTS Street Party report 13 July 96 London rts gn apc org Retrieved 15 October 2018 M41 Motorway Reclaim the Streets report Shepherd s Bush 13th July 1996 www urban75 org 1996 Retrieved 29 January 2019 It isn t a protest against anything It is a celebration of the potential of freedom of diversity of an ecological society of a free society It is not a protest against the car we use that as a symbol from video Reclaim The Streets Camcycle Cambridge Cycling Campaign Retrieved 15 October 2018 Lockout 1st Anniversary demonstration www labournet net Retrieved 15 October 2018 RTS Action Archive rts gn apc org Retrieved 15 October 2018 RTS commentary rts gn apc org Retrieved 15 October 2018 Never Mind The Ballots Reclaim The Streets and sacked Liverpool Dockers Social Justice March Trafalgar Square London 12th April 1997 www urban75 org 1997 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Report Reclaim the Streets 11 August 1997 Edinburgh www j12 org Retrieved 15 October 2018 Makepeace Jo 5 June 2001 Business Class Tube launched in London www indymedia org uk Retrieved 29 January 2019 Business Class Tube rts gn apc org 5 June 2001 Retrieved 29 January 2019 reclaim the streets oxford sydney 97 98 www urban75 com Retrieved 29 January 2019 SF Reclaim the Streets Opposes Proposition 98 Indybay org 31 May 2008 Reclaim The Streets returns to Sydney in 2014 Ohms not Bombs 6 September 2014 Raahgiri Day About Archived from the original on 10 November 2014 Retrieved 10 November 2014 Street festival headlined by DJ Paul Mac being held to protest against WestConnex The Daily Telegraph 27 November 2014 WestConnex motorway protest brings 3000 people to King St Newtown The Daily Telegraph 2 February 2015 Reclaim the Streets protest hits Sydney s CBD News 13 September 2015 If they shut down our dance floors we ll dance on the streets Newtown residents protest lockouts and WestConnex Sydney Morning Herald 12 December 2015 Anti Lockouts Protesters End March By Dumping Giant Turd On The Steps Of Star Shtty Casino Music Feeds 20 March 2016 Keepin it weird in Newtown City Hub 28 April 2016 Broke But Not Broken Sydney s Street Protests Continue Howl and Echoes 20 June 2016 Protestival for Sydney Park City Hub 5 October 2016 Newtown reclaims its streets City Hub 22 March 2017 Signed Sealed Delivered Music Festival for Marriage Equality City Hub 14 September 2017 Oxford Street party to go ahead after Yes court battle with police The Australian 13 November 2017 Meet the local organisations trying to keep the Newtown vibe alive The Quo 1 April 2018 Ruff Justice Reclaim the Streets sets date for next protest Avaredman net 25 April 2018 Enough of the politics Pill testing supporters rally in Sydney The Sydney Morning Herald 19 January 2019 Facebook EventFurther reading editWall Derek Earth First and the Anti Roads Movement Radical Environmentalism and Comparative Social Movements London Routledge 1999 ISBN 0 415 19064 9 Mosey Chris Car Wars Battles on the Road to Nowhere London Vision Paperbacks 2000 ISBN 1 901250 40 7 St John Graham 2009 Technomad Global Raving Countercultures Equinox Publishing UK ISBN 978 1 84553 625 1 Ramirez Blanco Julia Reclaim the Streets From Local to Global Party Protest Third Text 4 special issue Global Occupations of Art July 2013External links editReclaim The Streets London Reclaim the Streets The Film reloaded YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Today the word on the street is Occupy This is how we used to do it in the 90 s Documentary about RTS Car Busters Magazine is published four times a year by the World Carfree Network Reclaim the Streets 7 March 1999 Sydney urban75 Reclaim The Streets reports and photos RTS articles 1996 onwards Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reclaim the Streets amp oldid 1195461731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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