It’s New York Fashion Week — while many people have their eyes on the runway, street protests are giving glamorous fashion shows some serious competition. And where fashion is concerned, protest and dissent are never far away.

For many years, the use of certain colors, garments, and accessories has been a striking trend across pro-democracy movements. This is owing to many reasons, one of which is that what we wear is an immediate way of self-expression, and within the context of protests, it’s a way of public participation and taking a stand against the status quo. Below, we discuss what sartorial decisions represent in select pro-democracy movements, and shared colors chosen as symbols of unity and protest.

 

Red

In color psychology, red is the color considered to provoke the strongest emotions, ranging from passion to power, sacrifice, vigor, and anger. It’s a color that is difficult to miss, and because of its stimulating properties, it is often used to call for attention. In connection with a spectrum of political ideologies globally, red is also the most featured color in national flags around the world.

 

Burma

Shades of red have been associated with Burma’s democracy movement since the Saffron Revolution in 2007, when thousands of maroon-clad Buddhist monks joined in a massive uprising against the country’s military regime. Today, two weeks after a coup, a swelling protest movement has also adopted red to mark its stance against the country’s backslide into military dictatorship.

After a decade-long experiment in democracy, Burma’s military seized back control from the civilian government on February 1, 2021, and declared a year-long state of emergency. Previously, the country had been ruled by the military junta from 1962 until 2011. In the 2010 general election, a civilian government was created, but the military retained significant control of all political decisions.

The 2021 coup d’état took place four months after the re-election of Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party. Aung San Suu Kyi — known for leading the democratic transition in the country, but also for her defense and denial of the military’s ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) — is now under house arrest, and an unknown number of her fellow party members are detained.

In the days following the coup, a leaderless red ribbon campaign gained momentum among teachers, students, doctors, and growing ranks of civil servants who striked against the military coup. Demonstrators donned red ribbons and carried red flowers as symbols of resistance to the army takeover.