Police strike

Labor dispute tactic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A police strike is a potential tactic when law enforcement workers are embroiled in a labour dispute. Sometimes military personnel are called in to keep order or discipline the strikers. Police strikes have the potential to cause civil unrest.

List of police strikes

Europe

North America

South America

  • Bahia, Brazil (2001)[16]
  • Alagoas, Brazil (2001)[17]
  • Brazil (2004)[18]
  • 2010 Ecuador crisis. Police strike/coup partly in relation to planned benefit reductions.[19] After a state of emergency and the near assassination of the president, the government steps away from planned cuts to police and military benefits.[20] Police and military pay is then also increased.[20]
  • Bahia, Brazil (2012)[21]
  • 2013 police revolts in Argentina. Police strike over the value of their non inflation-indexed pay being eroded by rampant background inflation.[22] After days of national chaos, individual regional police forces receive pay increases ranging between 33% and 45%.[22]
  • 2017 Military Police of Espírito Santo strike in Brazil[23]
  • Ceará State, Brazil (2020) Police strike[24]
  • 2020 Buenos Aires' State Police strike

Australia

Asia

  • Shanghai (1940)[26]
  • New Delhi (1946)[27]

Africa

Dynamics

Legality

United Kingdom

Police officers in the United Kingdom are currently banned from taking strike action under the Police Act 1996. Police officers have been banned from striking since the passage of the Police Act 1919. The Police Federation of England and Wales balloted members in 2013 for the right to strike but failed to gain enough signatures to petition the government to amend the legislation.[30]

Causes

One cause for police strikes has been increases in the difficulty of policing itself. The wave of American police strikes in the late 1960s and 1970s accompanied other forms of social unrest—which themselves put pressure on police forces. Also, police wages, which had historically been exceptional, declined relative to the wages of other workers.[which?][31] Police strikes have also occurred in situations where national control was in question and the police's alignment differed from the current rulers (i.e. in occupied France and India).

See also

References

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