destroying fences at the
Gaza–Israel barrier in 2007 Direct action protestors may perform activities such as: Some protestors dress in
black bloc, wearing black clothing and face coverings to obscure their identities.
Ende Gelände protestors wear matching white suits. One of Greenpeace's tactics is to install banners in trees or at symbolic places like offices, statues, nuclear power plants. Direct action protestors may also destroy property through actions such as
vandalism,
theft,
breaking and entering,
sabotage,
tree spiking,
arson,
bombing,
ecotage, or
eco-terrorism.
Pranks may also be considered a form of direct action. Examples of direct action pranks include the use of
stink, critter, and paint bombs.
The Yes Men practice nonviolent direct action through pranks. Some direct action groups form legal teams, addressing interactions with the law enforcement, judges, and courts. American political scientist
Gene Sharp defined nonviolent direct action as "those methods of protest, resistance, and intervention without physical violence in which the members of the nonviolent group do, or refuse to do, certain things." American anarchist
Voltairine de Cleyre wrote that violent direct action utilizes physical, injurious force against people or, occasionally, property. Some activist groups, such as
Earth Liberation Front and
Animal Liberation Front, use property destruction, arson, and sabotage and claim their acts are nonviolent as they believe that violence is harm directed toward living things.
Mahatma Gandhi's methods, which he called
satyagraha, did not involve confrontation and could be described as "removal of support" without breaking laws besides those explicitly targeted. Examples of targeted laws include the
salt tax and the
Asiatic Registration Act. His preferred actions were largely symbolic and peaceful, and included "withdrawing membership, participation or attendance in government-operated [...] agencies." Gandhi and American civil rights leader
James Bevel were strongly influenced by
Leo Tolstoy's 1894 book
The Kingdom of God Is Within You, which promotes
passive resistance. Other terms for nonviolent direct action include
civil resistance,
people power, and
positive action.
Violent direct action Insurrectionary anarchism, a militant variant of anarchist ideology, primarily deals with direct action against governments. Insurrectionist anarchists see countries as inherently controlled by the upper classes, and thereby impossible to
reform. While the vast majority of anarchists are not militant and do not engage in militant actions, insurrectionists take violent action against the state and other targets. Most insurrectionary anarchists largely reject mass
grassroots organizations created by other anarchists, instead calling for coordinated militant action to be taken by
decentralized cell networks.
Fascism emphasizes direct action, including the legitimization of
political violence, as a core part of its politics. == Effectiveness ==