Resist!
Strategic direct action and civil disobedience such as strikes, sit-ins and occupations can expose injustice, slow down or stop harmful practices and win specific demands. Below is an archive of articles covering resistance groups in the United States and internationally. If you are inspired by a campaign, perhaps you will join or support it. If you like the tactics being used, you can adapt them for your own struggle. Check out our Resources Page for links to tools that may be helpful in your resistance.
The streets of Belém were occupied, according to organizers, by more than 70,000 people on Saturday, November 15, for the historic Global Climate March. Unlike the official COP30 spaces, the march brought together the diversity of peoples and demands from civil society in defense of climate justice.
With the force of the motto “We are the answer”, the tens of thousands of members of people’s movements held signs such as “Agribusiness is fire”, “There is no climate justice without popular agrarian reform” and “environmental collapse is capitalist”.
Football Fans March In Support As Palestine Plays First European Match
November 16, 2025
Alex MacDonald, Middle East Eye.
Resist!
Basque, Europe, Palestine, Palestine Solidarity, Soccer, Spain
Thousands marched in support of Palestine in the Spanish city of Bilbao as Palestinian footballers played their first European match against the Basque Country team.
The Basque Country team beat the Palestine team 3-0 in the friendly match, which was marked by shows of solidarity between both teams. Palestinians and the Basque have long shared political sympathies, with both involved in nationalist struggles for independence.
The two teams celebrated side by side, arms around each other, on the San Mames pitch in front of more than 50,000 spectators.
University Strikes Escalate As Derby And Lancaster Walk Out
November 16, 2025
Alex/Rose Cocker, The Canary.
Resist!
Higher Education, Strikes, Unions, United Kingdom (UK), Worker Rights and Jobs
Across UK universities, we’re seeing union members undertaking a massive wave of industrial action in recent weeks. Currently, over 65,000 University and College Union (UCU) members are having their say on potential nationwide university strikes.
The ballot opened back on 30 October, and will run up until 28 November. The union will aggregate the results across 137 institutions. As such, should the majority of members wish it, we could see strikes on every one of those 137 campuses in 2026.
Meanwhile, the UCU declared strike action at both Lancaster and Derby universities this week, with Northumbria also taking a step closer to strikes of its own by declaring a dispute with management.
Veterans Demand An End To War And Occupation
November 16, 2025
Jae Franklin, Fight Back! News.
Resist!
Anti-war Movement, Chicago, Venezuela, Veterans, Veterans Day
Chicago, IL – On November 11, hundreds of people gathered at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, demanding an immediate end to the militarization and federal attacks on our communities, divestment from state-funded violence such as genocide and war, and rights for all workers.
“I wanna ask you veterans, I wanna ask you workers, for your solidarity as we demonstrate, as we organize, and we clarify the principles of this country, that it is freedom, it is democracy, it is solidarity that moves us, not disunity, not exclusion, and certainly not ICE,” said Stacey Davis Gates
Veterans, Activists Protest Air Command Center Against War On Venezuela
Tucson, AZ – Three progressive Veterans organizations and others joined the Tucson Anti-War Committee outside the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base on Veterans Day, November 11, to protest the Trump administration’s war escalations on Venezuela. The group of nearly two dozen protesters received many more supportive honks from passing cars than in previous years – a sign that the tide has shifted as more Americans are fed up with the endless war machine.
With signs reading “No blood for oil” and “Hands off Venezuela,” the group heard from veterans and anti-war organizers.
Western Sahara’s Decolonization At Crossroads After 50 Years
November 15, 2025
Pavan Kulkarni, People's Dispatch.
Resist!
Decolonization, Morocco, Occupation, Sahrawi, Western Sahara
On November 6, the Sahrawis marked 50 years of occupation by the Moroccan kingdom, and continued resistance by activists, risking street violence, arrests, custodial torture, forced disappearances, and rapes by the occupation’s security forces.
The anniversary came at an ominous time for the cause of Sahrawi liberation. The US, UK, and Europe, especially France, are bringing ever more pressure on the international community to legitimize the illegal occupation of Western Sahara by Morocco, which in turn is handing over the occupied resources for Western countries to loot.
People’s Summit Begins In Brazil As An Alternative To COP30
November 15, 2025
Resumen English.
Resist!
Brazil, climate crisis, Climate Justice, COP30, People's Summit
The People’s Summit began on Wednesday, November 12, in Belém, Brazil, as a space for resistance and an alternative proposal to the official discussions of the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30).
The opening ceremony brought together some 5,000 people aboard 200 boats, which sailed along the Amazon River basin. This initial mobilization represents the arrival of popular movements from 62 countries.
The event, which will run until November 16 at the Federal University of Pará (UFPA), Guamá campus, seeks to counter what popular movements describe as “false solutions” to the global climate crisis.
No Contract Means No Coffee As Starbucks Baristas Walk Out
Chanting “What’s outrageous? Starbucks wages! What’s appalling? Starbucks stalling! What’s disgusting? Union busting!”, Starbucks workers at stores across the country walked out Thursday. They are on strike against unfair labor practices and the company’s stonewalling at the bargaining table.
The strike started with 65 stores in 40 cities, and could spread to as many as 550. The union, Starbucks Workers United, said it is prepared to make this the “longest and largest unfair labor practice strike in Starbucks history.” After rounds of practice pickets in October and November, workers voted 92 percent vote to strike.
The strike started on Starbucks’ big annual promotional “Red Cup Day,” a day many workers dread, Sabina Aguirre, a Columbus, Ohio, barista told the Labor Notes Podcast. Starbucks distributes a re-usable cup with most drinks as a promotion, leading to long lines. “It’s one of the busiest days for Starbucks all year,” said Aguirre. “It’s so well known to be a day of overwork and frustration on behalf of the employees.”
SHUN ALL STARBUCKS BREW
The union has organized 650 stores, but the company operates 10,000 stores in the U.S., so striking baristas are asking everyone to shun all Starbucks stores, whether union or not, for the duration of the strike, and tell the company why.
Starbucks started bargaining with its unionized workers in February of 2024, after inflicting record unfair labor practices starting in 2021, when the first stores in Buffalo organized with Starbucks Workers United, a division of Workers United/SEIU. But then progress stopped.
“It was just very disheartening, because so much progress was made in the earlier part of 2024, before the new CEO, Brian [Niccol], took over in September of last year,” said Tyler Cochran, who works in downtown Manhattan. “Obviously, we knew that getting to the economic portion of the bargaining is always going to be the most challenging part. So the timing there kind of aligned with Brian taking over.” Niccol came from Chipotle, where the company closed the first store that filed to unionize, later paying $240,000 to workers there in a settlement with the National Labor Relations Board. Niccol makes 666 times the pay of the average barista, Cochran said.
In the face of flagging sales, Niccol launched a billion dollar program to refurbish stores to get people “Back to Starbucks,” but baristas consistently say that adequate staffing is the main thing that would make stores more appealing to customers. Lines are often out the door, baristas said.
Chilkat Indian Village Tells New Palmer Mine Owners They’re ‘Not Welcome’
November 15, 2025
Native News Online.
Resist!
Environment, Food Security, Indigenous Sovereignty, Mining
Leaders of the Chilkat Indian Village of Klukwan and the conservation group Chilkat Forever are warning the new owners of the Palmer mine project that they will face “sustained and unyielding opposition” if they pursue hardrock mining in the Chilkat Valley.
The groups said the proposed mine — recently acquired by Vizsla Copper — threatens the Jilḵáat Aani Ḵa Héeni (Chilkat Valley Watershed), a region known for its rich cultural traditions and biodiverse ecosystem, including bald eagles, salmon, moose and bears.
“Whether it’s Vizsla Copper Corporation, American Pacific Mining Corporation, or another operator that owns the Palmer mining project, this industrial hardrock mining development lacks the consent of the Chilkat Indian Village - Klukwan and of many in the broader community,” said Kimberley Strong.
Big Win For News Guild In Three-Year Strike Against Post-Gazette
November 15, 2025
Mark Gruenberg, People's World.
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Media, Pittsburgh, Strikes, Unions, Worker Rights
After more than three years on strike against the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and five years of overall corporate violation of labor law, The News Guild of Pittsburgh, TNG-CWA Local 38061, completely won its case against the Block brothers, the paper’s owners.
Writing on Nov. 10 for a unanimous panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, Judge Cindy Chung—the former U.S. Attorney for Western Pennsylvania, headquartered in Pittsburgh—ordered the Blocks to bargain and reach a contract with the Guild, just as the National Labor Relations Board demanded in seeking an injunction, a mandatory court order, against the duo.
Zoning For The Future In Northwest Arkansas
November 15, 2025
Jordan P. Hickey, In these Times.
Resist!
Affordable Housing, Arkansas, Hyper-Gentrification, Urban Design, zoning
If this were the first city council meeting someone attended in Fayetteville, the construction proposal for The Hub would likely seem like a good prospect: seven stories of sleek new housing, in a city with desperate need for more of it, with 37 of its 312 apartments reserved as income-controlled “workforce units.” As the council members and a standing-room-only crowd listened on August 5, the representative from Chicago- based housing developer Core Spaces presented a plan that seemed almost ideal for the Northwest Arkansas college town.
Global Day Of Action In Solidarity With Colombia On Monday, November 17
November 14, 2025
Friends of the Hague Group, Popular Resistance.
Resist!
Colombia, Gustavo Petro, International Solidarity, Palestine, Uniting for Peace
Friends of the Hague Group (FOTHG), which launched in July 2025 to support multilateral efforts to end the Israeli genocide and ethnic cleansing against the Palestinian people and to ensure that all such efforts be grounded in the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, has called for a Global Day of Action in solidarity with Colombia on Monday, November 17. FOTHG's coordinator, Adrienne Pine, explains:
"PNGO [the Palestinian NGO network—the largest collective representation of Palestinian civil society] has demanded that a Uniting for Peace measure be introduced at the UN General Assembly to send a multinational protection force to Palestine and implement sanctions and a military blockade, and President Petro of Colombia has heeded its call by committing to introduce such a resolution.
Noboa Cracks Down On Protests While Pushing Rewrite Of Constitution
November 14, 2025
Pedro Labayen Herrera, CEPR.
Resist!
Daniel Noboa, Ecuador, Mass Protests, National Strike, Neoliberalism, State Repression
In mid-September, President Daniel Noboa announced the removal of Ecuador’s long-standing diesel subsidies. The decision — an unpopular measure that, when previously attempted in 2019 and 2022, sparked Indigenous-led protests that nearly toppled two governments — once again triggered mass demonstrations and a national strike, though this time on a more limited scale. The Noboa administration responded with violent repression, resulting in widespread human rights violations, the deaths of three protesters, and hundreds of arrests and injuries.
UK Doctors On Strike: BMA Turns Down No-Pay-Rise Offer
November 14, 2025
Alex/Rose Cocker, The Canary.
Resist!
British Medical Association (BMA), Doctors, Health Care, Strikes, United Kingdom (UK), Worker Rights and Jobs
The British Medical Association (BMA) has rejected a new offer from health secretary Wes Streeting to avert strikes on 14 November. Streeting gave the BMA until the end of today, 6 November, to consider. Not that they would have needed it, mind you – the offer didn’t make any move to restore resident doctors’ pay.
As the Canary previously reported, there are two issues at the heart of the doctor’s dispute with the government: job shortages and pay restoration. 34% of resident doctors hadn’t been able to secure regular locum or substantive employment in time for August this year, according to a BMA survey.
Thousands Of UC Employees Plan Strike To Protest Wage Stagnation
November 14, 2025
Vanguard, Portside.
Resist!
Higher Education, Strikes, University of California, Worker Rights and Jobs
More than 65,000 University of California campus and health center employees will launch a two-day strike on November 17 and 18 over the university’s failure to settle contracts addressing the cost of living and affordability crises facing its most economically vulnerable workers.
AFSCME (American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees) Local 3299, which represents more than 40,000 UC service and patient care technical workers, will lead the strike, joined in solidarity by 25,000 UC nurses represented by the California Nurses Association.