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70 Crim. L.Q. 247 (2022)
Policing Protest via the Civil Law: Class Actions, Injunctions, and the "Freedom Convoy"

handle is hein.journals/clwqrty70 and id is 259 raw text is: Policing Protest via the Civil Law: Class Actions,
Injunctions, and the Freedom Convoy
Irina Ceric and Jasminka Kalajdzic
1. Introduction and Overview
In the aftermath of the so-called Freedom Convoy and the
blockades in Ottawa, Windsor, and Coutts, Alberta, crucial
questions have emerged about the implication of the use of the civil
law to demobilize and criminalize protest movements. Injunctions
have long been wielded by governments and corporations against
movements for Indigenous and environmental justice, but their
invocation by local residents and small businesses against a lengthy
and disruptive protest is unusual. While class actions have a similarly
long history of use by large groups of people against well-resourced
institutional defendants, they have rarely been employed as a vehicle
for interim injunctive relief, let alone by individuals against other
individuals in response to an abdication of the state's law
enforcement functions. The combination of these two civil law
tools in Li v. Barber, a class action brought by downtown Ottawa
residents, workers, and businesses, is a unique and inspiring use of the
law to counter extremism, but one that also carries risks of
normalizing private responses to public problems.
As experts on injunctions and class actions, respectively, the
authors set out to analyze Li v. Barber in its doctrinal and historical
contexts and for its potential policy implications. We first consider
how the civil law tools of class actions and injunctions (separately and
in combination) have operated in the protest context historically,
especially with respect to civil disobedience. We then turn to the
normative question, how should they? An absence of policing in the
Ottawa context left private citizens with only one legal avenue: to don
the mantle of private attorney general. Ms. Li and her counsel
leveraged two kinds of civil procedure against a better organized,
*   Irina Ceric: Post-Doctoral Visitor, Osgoode Hall Law School and incoming
Assistant Professor, University of Windsor, Faculty of Law. Jasminka
Kalajdzic: Associate Professor, University of Windsor, Faculty of Law and
Director, Class Action Clinic.

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