UK Resilience

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Public Protest and Industrial Action


The Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform [External website] is the lead department for industry and manufacturing in the UK. The Home Office [External website] is responsible for maintaining public order, with the police forces.

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The level of risk

Large scale public protests and industrial action are one of the many rights and responsibilities inherent in a multiparty democracy. The congregation of significant numbers of persons can be hazardous if not properly managed. The hazard is significantly increased if the protest includes people intent on civil disobedience and causing physical damage.

The Cabinet Office is the lead co-ordinating Department in Government, and for contingency planning assessments it considers two broad types of protests. Firstly, one involving tens of thousands of protestors including a small proportion of protestors intent on causing physical damage, and secondly a nationally co-ordinated targeted protest.

Examples

The table below shows some examples of the specific risks which are assessed as part of the national risk assessment framework. The framework applies locally, regionally, in the devolved administrations and at the UK level. Details of the framework and risk assessment methodology can be found in the risk section of this site.

Risk Evaluation
Type of Risk Risk Categories Outcome Description for Planning Purposes
Hazard Large scale public protest Large scale public protests. Tens of thousands of highly motivated protesters, including a hard core of 2,000 protestors, causing physical damage, requiring a nationally coordinated police response.

Practitioner Information

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