People Power: Voices of Protest and Dissent in the Midlands

Getting the message heard, from the placard and megaphone to the campaign video.
These films celebrate the right to protest, with a look at how the campaigners of the 1980s reacted when they were met head on with a radical government sustained by strong electoral majorities. This collection also showcases campaigns that embraced the new medium of video, taking their battles to the next level with tapes of their own, free from television's editorial controls. The material in this collection comes from two sources: television and an independent video production company. On television we find a more genteel approach to activism, where studio discussions take centre stage. Away from television we look to the work of the Trade Union Resource Centre in Birmingham, which helped groups to get their messages across in their own way. So join us as we look back at life in the 1980s, in some ways a depressingly familiar place - with families struggling to survive on meagre incomes, the NHS in crisis, and the most vulnerable in society unprotected.
8 items in this collection

The Labour Party and LGBT Rights

Máire O'Shea is Innocent

Put People First

Our Jobs are Not for Sale

Whatever Happened to Student Protest?

Protest by Deaf Television Viewers

Muhammad Must Stay

SCARF Demo 1979