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Lock-on (protest tactic)
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A lock-on is a technique used by protesters to make it difficult to remove them from their place of protest. It often involves improvised or specially designed and constructed hardware, although a basic lock-on is the human chain which relies simply on hand grip.[1]
Objective
[edit]In American protest movements dating from the 1960s and 1970s, the term lockdown applies to a person's attaching themself to a building, object, fence or other immobile object.
The safe removal of the protesters necessitates the involvement of skilled technicians, and is often time-consuming.
The lock-on chosen by the protester may be the difference between being arrested or not, or may vary the kind or number of charges brought against them by the police. If a protester can remove themselves when asked to by the police, they may stand a better chance of not being arrested. However, if they can remove themselves and they choose not to, they may receive a charge for refusing to remove themselves from the lock-on.
Locking on is a very successful means of slowing down operations that are perceived by the protesters to be illegal or immoral. It is also often used to allow time for journalists to arrive to record the scene and take statements from the group's spokespeople.
Devices
[edit]
Lock-ons were originally performed with chains and handcuffs, but other devices have been introduced, including tripods and tubes or pipes with handholds built in to link a person to an object or to create chains of people. Other common hardware includes padlocks, U-locks and other bicycle locks, lockboxes and tripods and platforms and other rigging in tree sitting.[1][2]
A more complicated lock-on is the sleeping dragon, which involves protesters putting their limbs through pipes containing concrete, or a mixture of steel and concrete, and is only limited by the imagination and ingenuity of those making the lock-on. The protester can choose between a type that will allow them to willingly remove themselves or a type that requires machinery to remove them. Devices can be buried as an additional barrier to removal. A car dragon is a car concreted into place after removing the wheels, where protestors can then lock-on to a further device fixed to the car.[3]
Opposition in law
[edit]In the United Kingdom in May 2023, the Public Order Act 2023 made it a criminal offence for a person to "attach themselves to another person, to an object or to land" with the intention of causing serious disruption. "Going equipped" with such an aim was also criminalised.[4][5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Young, Patrick (March 18, 2007). "The Next Page: Hot trends in protest technology". Post-Gazette.com. PG Publishing Co., Inc. Retrieved February 6, 2011.
- ^ McIntyre, Iain (2017). "Environmental blockading timeline, 1974-1997" (PDF). The Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved September 20, 2024.
- ^ Dalzell, Stephanie (March 11, 2015). "Anti-protester laws: West Australian activists using locks to attach themselves to objects face tough new laws". ABC New online. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved March 12, 2015.
- ^ "Public Order Act 2023". UK Public General Acts. legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved May 24, 2023.
- ^ Barradale, Greg (May 9, 2023). "What you need to know about the Public Order Act, the law used to arrest coronation protesters". The Big Issue. Retrieved May 24, 2023.
External links
[edit]- locking on to a gate in the UK
- locked on to the gate
- police specialist removing locks
- tubes in series with three people to close one lane
- online article from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Lock-on (protest tactic)
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Objectives
Core Mechanism
The lock-on tactic entails protesters physically securing their bodies to immovable objects, such as gates, machinery, or vehicles, or linking themselves to other protesters using robust locking devices that resist quick removal. These devices commonly include chains combined with padlocks or D-locks, handcuffs, steel pipes, or reinforced tubes, which exploit the mechanical advantage of immobility to obstruct targeted activities.[1][6] By attaching limbs—typically arms or necks—directly to the object or through intermediary structures, protesters create a human barrier that cannot be easily displaced without tools.[7] At its core, the mechanism depends on the time-intensive nature of disentanglement, as devices are often constructed from hardened materials like PVC pipes threaded with metal bolts or rebar, sometimes encased in concrete or protective layers such as duct tape and chicken wire to hinder cutting. Removal typically necessitates specialized equipment, including bolt cutters for lighter locks, angle grinders, or reciprocating saws for heavier assemblies, processes that can require trained personnel and extend disruption for hours.[6] This delay amplifies the protest's visibility and pressure on authorities, as operations like construction or transport halt until extrication is complete, often involving multi-agency coordination.[6] Variations in application allow for scalability, such as daisy-chaining multiple protesters via connected tubes or barrels to block larger areas with fewer individuals, or embedding devices partially underground for added permanence. While presented as non-violent by proponents, the tactic's effectiveness stems from its causal disruption of workflows, independent of intent, as physical severance remains the only practical resolution absent voluntary release.[1][6]Intended Goals and Justifications
Protesters employing the lock-on tactic primarily aim to physically obstruct machinery, vehicles, or access points at sites of perceived environmental harm, thereby delaying or halting operations such as logging, road construction, or fossil fuel extraction. This disruption imposes direct economic costs on projects, with the intention of making continued activity untenable without intervention, as seen in early Earth First! actions against timber sales in the 1980s, where lock-ons to bulldozers extended blockades for hours or days.[8] In contemporary applications, groups like Just Stop Oil target oil infrastructure to blockade depots and terminals, seeking to interrupt supply chains and compel policy shifts, such as halting new fossil fuel licenses in the UK.[9] The tactic's core goal is operational paralysis, forcing authorities or corporations to divert resources for removal, which activists calculate will amplify visibility and pressure.[10] Beyond immediate hindrance, lock-ons serve to generate media coverage and public discourse on issues like climate inaction or habitat destruction, positioning the protest as a dramatic "bearing witness" to systemic failures. Just Stop Oil, for instance, explicitly pursues "maximum disruption" to provoke outrage and elevate fossil fuel dependency as a crisis, arguing that conventional advocacy has yielded insufficient governmental response.[11] Proponents justify the method by invoking nonviolent direct action principles, akin to historical precedents where physical obstruction compelled negotiation, contending that lock-ons exploit operators' reluctance to use force against chained individuals, thereby maintaining a controlled escalation.[12] This rationale frames the tactic as a moral lever, pressuring targets through ethical dilemmas rather than violence, though it presupposes public sympathy for the cause to translate disruption into broader support.[13] Justifications often rest on the assertion that democratic channels—petitions, elections, litigation—have proven inadequate against entrenched interests, necessitating civil disobedience to safeguard ecosystems or future habitability. Activists cite empirical shortfalls, such as ongoing fossil fuel expansion despite IPCC warnings, as evidence that disruption is a proportionate response to existential risks.[14] In anti-infrastructure contexts, lock-ons are defended as a last-resort defense of public goods, protecting communities from harms like pollution when regulatory safeguards falter, as articulated by UK campaigners opposing the tactic's criminalization under the 2022 Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act.[15] However, these claims are advanced by advocacy sources with environmental agendas, and independent assessments of causal impact remain contested, with some analyses questioning whether such actions alienate publics or entrench opposition.[14]Historical Development
Origins in Civil Disobedience
The tactic of chaining oneself to immovable objects originated in the United Kingdom's women's suffrage movement during the early 20th century, as a method of non-violent civil disobedience to demand political enfranchisement. Suffragettes, organized primarily under the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), employed this approach to physically obstruct authorities, prolong their presence in public spaces, and amplify media attention to their cause amid repeated arrests and forced removals. By attaching themselves with chains and padlocks to railings or grilles, protesters made extraction more laborious, symbolizing both their subjugation under law and their resolve to challenge it publicly.[16] A notable early instance occurred on January 17, 1908, when Edith New and Olivia Smith chained themselves to the railings outside 10 Downing Street, the residence of Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, shouting "Votes for Women!" to divert police attention and enable a companion to attempt entry into the building. This action exemplified the tactic's strategic use in coordinated disruptions, forcing authorities to saw through chains or employ tools for removal, which often drew crowds and press coverage. Similarly, on October 28, 1908, Muriel Matters and Helen Fox chained themselves to the metal grille separating the Ladies' Gallery from the House of Commons chamber during a session, unfurling a banner reading "Votes for Women" and shouting protests; the grille required sawing for their release, leading to the eventual removal of the barrier in 1917.[17][18] These applications aligned with core principles of civil disobedience—deliberate, open violation of norms for moral ends—predating formalized environmental or anti-war lock-ons by decades, though they carried risks of injury during forcible detachment and escalation to hunger strikes or property damage in broader suffrage campaigns. The method's effectiveness in highlighting systemic exclusion without direct violence influenced subsequent protest repertoires, emphasizing physical immobility as a tool for moral suasion over confrontation.[16][18]Adoption in Environmental and Anti-Infrastructure Movements
Lock-on tactics emerged in environmental activism during the late 1970s as a method to physically obstruct logging operations threatening biodiverse areas. In Australia, protesters at Terania Creek in northern New South Wales employed lock-ons in 1979 to blockade machinery and prevent the clearing of subtropical rainforest, marking an early instance of the technique in direct action campaigns.[4] This approach involved chaining individuals to equipment, forcing authorities to either halt work or risk injury during removal, thereby delaying projects and drawing public attention to ecological damage.[4] In the United States, the radical group Earth First!, established in 1980, adopted and popularized lock-ons throughout the 1980s to defend old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest. Activists locked themselves to bulldozers, logging trucks, and other heavy machinery in locations such as Oregon, California, and Washington, aiming to disrupt timber harvests and highlight the irreversible loss of ancient ecosystems.[4] These actions built on non-violent civil disobedience principles but escalated confrontation by exploiting safety protocols that slowed equipment removal, often extending blockades for hours or days.[19] The tactic's adoption extended to anti-infrastructure movements in Europe, particularly Britain's 1990s road protests against expansive motorway expansions. Influenced by Earth First! methods, campaigners at sites like Twyford Down in 1992 used lock-ons—attaching to digger wheels or site gates—to impede the M3 extension through sensitive chalk grassland habitats, which supported rare flora and archaeological sites.[20] Such protests combined lock-ons with tree platforms and tunnels, amplifying disruption and contributing to broader scrutiny of government infrastructure plans, though they faced aggressive police clearances.[20] By the mid-1990s, lock-ons had become a staple in campaigns against urban bypasses and airport runways, adapting to urban settings with portable arm-tubes linking multiple protesters.[21] Subsequent applications targeted fossil fuel infrastructure, including pipelines and fracking sites, where lock-ons delayed drilling rigs and excavators. For instance, in 2017 at Preston New Road in Lancashire, UK, anti-fracking activists formed lock-ons with tubes to blockade access roads, halting operations for periods amid debates over seismic risks and groundwater contamination.[22] This evolution reflected the tactic's versatility in scaling from forest clearings to linear infrastructure corridors, prioritizing physical immobility to enforce pauses in environmentally contested developments.[19]Evolution and Global Spread
The lock-on tactic, initially employing basic chains or handcuffs to affix protesters to fixed structures, gained prominence in the United Kingdom during the early 1990s anti-road protests, particularly against the M11 link road expansion in east London starting in 1993, where activists used it to delay bulldozers and halt site clearance.[20] This marked a shift from symbolic chaining—seen in earlier civil disobedience like suffragette actions in 1913—to more obstructive applications aimed at manufacturing vulnerability and forcing prolonged police intervention.[23] By the mid-1990s, during the Newbury bypass campaign from 1996 to 1997, the technique evolved with improvised devices such as concrete-filled barrels and arm tubes, enabling groups of protesters to interlock and resist quick removal, resulting in over 1,000 arrests and significant project delays.[23] Technological refinements continued into the 2000s, incorporating "sleeping dragons"—PVC pipes filled with expanding foam connected by steel cables—to create rigid human barricades that required cutting tools for extraction, a method first widely documented in British eco-activist repertoires against infrastructure projects.[6] These adaptations emphasized non-violent escalation, drawing from Earth First! influences but tailored for urban and rural blockades, with protesters often coordinating via affinity groups to maximize disruption while minimizing injury risk.[24] The tactic spread globally through transnational activist networks, reaching the United States by the late 1990s, where it featured in WTO protests in Seattle on November 30, 1999, with "hard blocks" using body-locking to structures alongside soft human chains, influencing subsequent anti-globalization and environmental actions.[25] In Australia, lock-ons became staples of anti-coal and logging campaigns by the early 2000s, prompting legislative responses like proposed bans in Queensland by 2019 due to their use in obstructing mining equipment.[1] Canada saw widespread adoption in the Fairy Creek old-growth logging blockade starting in 2020, escalating to the largest civil disobedience action in national history by 2021, with lock-ons to gates and machinery halting operations across 1,000 kilometers of forest.[26] By the 2010s, the method disseminated further via climate-focused groups like Extinction Rebellion, founded in the UK in 2018, which exported lock-on variants—including gluing and tripod-supported occupations—to Europe, North America, and Australia, evident in coordinated disruptions at airports and highways from 2019 onward.[27] This global proliferation correlated with rising environmental urgency, though it elicited backlash, including the UK's Public Order Act 2023 criminalizing lock-ons causing "serious disruption," and similar restrictions in Germany and France by 2023, reflecting authorities' adaptation to the tactic's effectiveness in amplifying media attention and policy debates.[27][28]Techniques and Devices
Basic Locking Methods
Basic locking methods in lock-on protests involve direct physical attachment of protesters' bodies to immovable objects, infrastructure, or each other using readily available hardware to impede access or operations. These techniques prioritize simplicity and minimal preparation, often employing chains, padlocks, and bicycle D-locks to secure limbs or torsos to gates, railings, vehicles, or machinery. For instance, protesters may wrap a chain around their waist or wrist and padlock it to heavy equipment, requiring tools like bolt cutters for removal, which delays enforcement efforts.[8][29] Another foundational approach uses arm-linking, where protesters interlock arms or insert them into short pipes or barrels, sometimes reinforced with internal bolts or chains to connect multiple individuals in a chain formation. This method, known as a basic "sleeping dragon" variant, allows groups to block pathways by daisy-chaining bodies through tubes wide enough for an arm but narrow for extraction without cutting.[6][30] D-locks, heavy-duty U-shaped bicycle locks, serve as a portable basic tool for encircling thin structures like fence posts or vehicle wheels, with the lock's shackle passing through a loop on the protester's clothing or a short chain. These devices, available commercially, resist basic cutting tools and have been employed since the 1990s in anti-road protests to halt construction briefly.[31]Specialized and Improvised Devices
 and Just Stop Oil (JSO) have frequently deployed lock-on tactics against oil refineries, terminals, and depots to impede fossil fuel logistics and demand government cessation of new extraction licenses. On April 1, 2022, over 200 protesters from JSO and XR simultaneously blockaded ten UK oil terminals, such as those near Birmingham, London Gatwick Airport, and Southampton, by occupying roads, ascending tankers, and affixing themselves via chains and lock-on devices to entrances, which delayed fuel distribution for hours and prompted over 100 arrests.[41][42] These operations targeted critical nodes in the petroleum supply chain, with activists arguing that such interruptions highlight societal dependence on hydrocarbons amid rising global temperatures.[43] A prominent example at a refinery occurred on August 19, 2021, when XR members chained themselves to gates and vehicles at the ExxonMobil Fawley Refinery in Hampshire—the United Kingdom's largest oil processing facility, handling over 300,000 barrels daily—opposing expansion plans that would increase capacity by 10% and protesting institutional financing of fossil fuels.[44] The blockade halted ingress for several hours before police intervention. Similarly, on May 3, 2022, approximately 40 JSO activists scaled tankers and locked arms to the perimeter at the NuStar Clydebank oil terminal near Glasgow, Scotland, suspending loading operations for the day and affecting jet fuel supplies to regional airports.[45][46] Further actions included an April 6, 2022, lock-on at the Kingsbury terminal in Warwickshire, the UK's principal petroleum storage site with capacity exceeding 3 million cubic meters, where XR-linked protesters secured themselves to access points, disrupting tanker egress and coinciding with occupations at Shell headquarters.[47] Internationally, XR Norway participants on March 16, 2024, blockaded the Rafnes refinery south of Oslo using lock-ons to boats and barriers, part of a coordinated North Sea campaign against petroleum infrastructure across six countries.[48] Such tactics, often employing bicycle D-locks, steel tubes, or adhesive, have escalated enforcement responses, including UK's 2023 Public Order Act criminalizing "locking on" with up to 51-week sentences, though data from police logs indicate disruptions rarely exceed 24 hours due to rapid removal by authorities.[49][27]Legal Framework and Consequences
Classification as Civil Disobedience
Lock-on tactics are generally classified as a form of civil disobedience due to their intentional violation of laws such as trespassing, public nuisance, or obstruction of highways, undertaken publicly to protest perceived environmental injustices while protesters typically accept legal consequences.[1][50] Civil disobedience, as defined in philosophical literature, involves non-violent, conscientious breaches of unjust laws or policies to appeal to a sense of justice, often drawing from traditions exemplified by Henry David Thoreau's resistance to government overreach and Mahatma Gandhi's satyagraha, where participants openly defy authority and submit to punishment to highlight moral imperatives.[51] Lock-ons align with these criteria by physically impeding operations—such as chaining to machinery during logging protests—without direct violence against persons, aiming to disrupt harmful activities like deforestation or fossil fuel extraction until removal by authorities.[52] Proponents within environmental activism, including groups like Earth First!, frame lock-ons as non-violent direct action that embodies civil disobedience by prioritizing ethical imperatives over legal compliance, as seen in early applications during 1980s U.S. forest defense campaigns where activists locked to equipment to halt timber sales.[50] This classification emphasizes the tactic's role in escalating non-violent resistance beyond symbolic protest, forcing confrontation with authorities while avoiding escalation to physical altercations, thereby maintaining a moral high ground akin to historical sit-ins or blockades.[1] Empirical accounts from Australian anti-coal protests, for instance, describe lock-ons as tools that prevent mass standoffs with police, reducing risks of injury compared to unstructured crowds.[13] Critics, however, argue that lock-ons deviate from purer forms of civil disobedience by introducing coercion that burdens third parties, such as delaying emergency services or imposing removal costs on operators, potentially amounting to "moral blackmail" rather than mere law-breaking for conscience's sake.[12] Despite this, legal and activist analyses predominantly uphold the civil disobedience label, noting that the tactic's design—using devices like U-locks or arm tubes—intentionally complicates but does not preclude safe extrication, distinguishing it from sabotage or violence.[53] In jurisdictions like the UK and Australia, proposed bans on lock-on devices under public order laws implicitly recognize them as civil disobedience by targeting their disruptive yet non-violent nature, rather than equating them with criminal damage.[54] This consensus holds across peer-reviewed discussions, where lock-ons are contrasted with escalatory tactics like tree-spiking, affirming their place within bounded, accountable protest repertoires.[55]National Laws and Enforcement Challenges
In the United Kingdom, the Public Order Act 2023 introduced a specific criminal offence for "locking on," defined as attaching oneself to another person, object, or infrastructure with the intent or reasonable knowledge of causing serious disruption to the use or operation of key infrastructure such as roads, railways, or airports.[56] This offence carries penalties of up to six months imprisonment and/or an unlimited fine on summary conviction, or up to three years on indictment for cases involving aggravating factors like prior convictions.[57] Earlier legislation, such as the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, addressed related tactics through aggravated trespass provisions, but the 2023 Act explicitly targets lock-ons to counter their use in environmental protests by groups like Just Stop Oil.[58] Australia lacks uniform national laws on lock-ons, with regulation occurring at the state level; Queensland's 2019 anti-protest laws prohibit possessing or using lock-on devices near prescribed infrastructure, imposing up to two years imprisonment and fines of AU$13,600 (approximately US$9,000) for violations, justified by risks from devices potentially incorporating hazardous materials like expanding foam or chemicals.[59] Victoria's 2024 amendments to the Summary Offences Act ban the use of chains, locks, or adhesives in protests causing public obstruction, with penalties including up to 12 months jail, amid concerns over disruptions to critical sites like ports and mines.[60] These measures reflect state responses to tactics employed in anti-coal and anti-gas protests, prioritizing infrastructure protection over unrestricted assembly.[1] In the United States, no federal statute explicitly criminalizes lock-ons, which are typically prosecuted under state laws for trespass, public nuisance, or disorderly conduct as forms of civil disobedience unprotected by the First Amendment when they involve illegal interference with property or traffic.[61] For instance, blocking highways or equipment in pipeline protests can trigger charges under statutes like 18 U.S.C. § 2101 for interstate commerce interference, with penalties varying by jurisdiction but often including fines and misdemeanor or felony terms based on disruption scale.[62] Several states, including Florida and Oklahoma, enacted enhanced penalties post-2020 for protests damaging critical infrastructure, escalating lock-on responses to felonies with sentences up to 20 years.[63] Germany treats lock-ons under general criminal code provisions like § 240 (coercion) or § 263 (trespass) during anti-coal actions at sites such as Lützerath, where evictions involve judicial orders and police force but face legal challenges from assembly rights under Article 8 of the Basic Law.[64] Enforcement often requires court-approved clearances, as seen in 2023 operations clearing treehouses and lock-ons, balancing protest freedoms with mining operations extended by law until 2038.[65] Enforcement challenges universally stem from the tactical design of lock-ons, such as "sleeping dragons" (concrete-filled barrels with internal arm locks) or steel tubes, which necessitate specialized tools like angle grinders or hydraulic spreaders while minimizing injury risks to protesters, often extending removal times to hours per individual.[6] Police require trained protester removal teams (PRTs), but inconsistencies in training and equipment across agencies lead to resource strains, with operations demanding medical oversight and sometimes delaying arrests until safe extrication.[66] In high-profile cases, such as UK motorway blockades, these delays amplify economic losses—estimated at £1 million per hour in some instances—while exposing officers to hazards like hidden mechanisms or protester resistance.[67] Causal factors include protesters' intent to maximize disruption duration, outpacing law enforcement's non-lethal protocols, which prioritize de-escalation over rapid clearance to avoid liability for harm.[68]Key Court Cases and Penalties
In the United Kingdom, the Public Order Act 2023 created the standalone offence of locking-on, defined as attaching oneself to a person, object, or infrastructure with the intention of causing serious disruption to the public or key infrastructure, carrying a maximum penalty of 51 weeks' imprisonment, an unlimited fine, or both.[69] A related offence of being equipped to lock-on, involving possession of items intended for such attachment, incurs the same penalties.[3] Prior to this legislation, lock-on actions were often prosecuted under aggravated trespass provisions of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, which allow up to three months' imprisonment or a fine for intentionally disrupting lawful activities on land.[70] One of the earliest convictions under the 2023 Act involved Edward Allnutt, a 42-year-old protester, who was found guilty at Northampton Magistrates' Court in February 2024 for going equipped to lock-on during an animal rights demonstration at Towcester Racecourse on 1 July 2023.[71] Allnutt was arrested in possession of a rucksack containing a bicycle D-lock, cable ties, and super glue, items deemed suitable for attachment to structures amid an attempt by protesters to storm the track during the English Greyhound Derby. In April 2024, he received a suspended prison sentence and a fine, marking an initial application of the new law to deter preparatory acts for disruption.[72] Subsequent cases have shown varied outcomes, highlighting judicial scrutiny of intent and evidence. In September 2025, the "Drax 15" trial collapsed, resulting in acquittals for 15 defendants charged with being equipped to lock-on at a biomass power station protest, due to insufficient proof that items like chains and locks were specifically intended for disruptive attachment rather than general use.[73] Similarly, in January 2025, three protesters were acquitted at Telford Magistrates' Court of locking-on charges related to a demonstration, with the defense successfully arguing lack of intent to cause serious disruption.[74] Another acquittal in July 2025 cleared defendants of both locking-on and aggravated trespass at a separate event, underscoring that courts require clear evidence of disruption beyond mere presence of locking devices.[75]| Case | Date of Incident | Charge | Outcome | Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R v Allnutt (Northampton) | 1 July 2023 | Going equipped to lock-on (POA 2023) | Guilty | Suspended sentence and fine[72] |
| Drax 15 | 2024 (protest date unspecified) | Being equipped to lock-on (POA 2023) | Acquitted (trial collapse) | None[73] |
| Telford Lock-On Protest | Unspecified 2024 | Locking-on (POA 2023) | Acquitted | None[74] |