extended protest - meaning and definition. What is extended protest
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What (who) is extended protest - definition

EXPRESSION OF OBJECTION
National protest; Political protest; Protestor; Protester; Protests; Protesters; Protest movements; Demonstation; Protest action; Protesting; Remonstrance; Political protests; Protest group; Protest methods; Online campaign; Protest movement; Remonstrator; Public outcry; Social protest; Remonstration; Protestors; Public protest; Sports protests
  • Protesters against [[big government]] fill the West Lawn of the [[U.S. Capitol]] and the [[National Mall]], 12 September 2009
  • An artist's depiction of a prototypical angry mob protesting with the threat of violence
  • work=USA Today }}</ref>
  • UCL]], [[anarchist]] protest in France, on October 16th during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]
  • [[Occupy Wall Street]] protesters in [[Zuccotti Park]] using the Internet to get their message out over social networking as events happen, September 2011
  • Rio+20]] conference in Brazil, June 2012
  • brutal polices]] during referendum
  • Protest inside the [[Wisconsin State Capitol]]
  • Farmer land rights protest in [[Jakarta]], Indonesia
  • Graffitis and papers glued on walls during a feminist protest in Mexico
  • Iraq War Protest]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]<ref>[https://www.flickr.com/photos/7563356@N08/3377938160/ https://www.flickr.com] Image of black bloc members during an Iraq War protest in Washington, D.C., 21 March 2009</ref>
  • March next to the [[Benito Juárez Hemicycle]], 27 August 1968, [[Mexico City]]
  • A protester [[photobombing]] a news reporter during a protest in New York City
  • Debanhi Escobar]].
  • Protesters outside the [[Oireachtas]] in [[Dublin]], [[Republic of Ireland]]
  • TET passed candidates who are protesting over SSC scam in [[West Bengal]], beneath the statue of [[Mahatma Gandhi]] in [[Kolkata]] Maidan.
  • Protest march in [[Palmerston North]], [[New Zealand]]
  • Demonstration in front of the [[MPR/DPR/DPD building]] in [[Jakarta]] during [[2019 Indonesian protests and riots]]
  • Protester with a "Free The Bee" placard during the COVID-19 protests in Berlin on 29th of August 2020, near the [[Brandenburg Gate]]
  • special status]].
  • Russia invaded Ukraine]] in February 2022
  • Greece]] calling for the boycott of a bookshop after an employee was fired, allegedly for her political activism

protest         
1) v. to complain in some public way about any act already done or about to be done, such as adoption of a regulation by a county board, sending troops overseas, or use of the death penalty. 2) v. to dispute the amount of property taxes, the assessed evaluation of property for tax purposes or an import duty. 3) n. a written demand for payment of the amount owed on a promissory note which has not been paid when due or a check which has been dishonored (not paid by the bank).
Protester         
·noun One who protests a bill of exchange, or note.
II. Protester ·noun One who protests; one who utters a solemn declaration.
protest         
(protested)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
If you protest against something or about something, you say or show publicly that you object to it. In American English, you usually say that you protest it.
Groups of women took to the streets to protest against the arrests...
The students were protesting at overcrowding in the university hostels...
They were protesting soaring prices...
He picked up the cat before Rosa could protest.
VERB: V about/against/at n, V about/against/at n, V n, V
2.
A protest is the act of saying or showing publicly that you object to something.
The opposition now seems too weak to stage any serious protests against the government...
The unions called a two-hour strike in protest at the railway authority's announcement.
...a protest march.
N-VAR: oft N against/at/about n
3.
If you protest that something is the case, you insist that it is the case, when other people think that it may not be.
When we tried to protest that Mo was beaten up they didn't believe us...
'I never said any of that to her,' he protested...
He has always protested his innocence.
VERB: V that, V with quote, V n

Wikipedia

Protest

A protest (also called a demonstration, remonstration or remonstrance or a maree richo) is a public expression of objection, disapproval or dissent towards an idea or action, typically a political one. Protests can be thought of as acts of cooperation in which numerous people cooperate by attending, and share the potential costs and risks of doing so. Protests can take many different forms, from individual statements to mass demonstrations. Protesters may organize a protest as a way of publicly making their opinions heard in an attempt to influence public opinion or government policy, or they may undertake direct action in an attempt to enact desired changes themselves. Where protests are part of a systematic and peaceful nonviolent campaign to achieve a particular objective, and involve the use of pressure as well as persuasion, they go beyond mere protest and may be better described as a type of protest called civil resistance or nonviolent resistance.

Various forms of self-expression and protest are sometimes restricted by governmental policy (such as the requirement of protest permits), economic circumstances, religious orthodoxy, social structures, or media monopoly. One state reaction to protests is the use of riot police. Observers have noted an increased militarization of protest policing in many countries, with police deploying armored vehicles and snipers against protesters. When such restrictions occur, protests may assume the form of open civil disobedience, more subtle forms of resistance against the restrictions, or may spill over into other areas such as culture and emigration.

A protest itself may at times be the subject of a counter-protest. In such cases, counter-protesters demonstrate their support for the person, policy, action, etc. that is the subject of the original protest. Protesters and counter-protesters can sometimes violently clash. One study found that nonviolent activism during the civil rights movement in the United States tended to produce favorable media coverage and changes in public opinion focusing on the issues organizers were raising, but violent protests tended to generate unfavorable media coverage that generated public desire to restore law and order.