Youth-led protests like that in Nepal, made headlines capturing much of the world’s attention, several other major protests and movements surged across different countries, signaling widespread public unrest beyond just GenZ. The earth protested in 2020, nature protested in the first two quarters of 2025, and now the residents of this planet are protesting for reasons associated with them.
2025 Global Protests to Know About
France: The Block Everything Movement
After the Prime Minister, Francois Bayrou, resigned, France is undergoing a new wave of unrest with the grassroots groups organizing the “Block Everything protests”. These protests are directed at destabilizing transport, schools and life to convey dissatisfaction with the austerity measures of the government, inflation and political stalemate. More than 80,000 security officers have been put on the streets across the country in confrontations and blockades, and tens of thousands are predicted to engage in a prolonged campaign of civil disobedience. Pharmacy and healthcare workers have been among those who have called on a nationwide shutdown over frustration at public service cuts.
Indonesia: Labor Rights Protests
Protests were rampant in Jakarta with workers and citizens threatening to achieve a higher standard in labor protection and shutting down the controversial companies. The demonstrators were met by the police with force that led to arrests and injuries. Such protests indicate increased dissatisfaction in Southeast Asia with economic inequality and unemployment, which have global appeal.
Japan: Anti-Immigration Protests
In August 2025, thousands of people went to the streets of such large Japanese cities as Tokyo and Osaka, urging them to deport all illegal immigrants. This unrest was a response to the outrage over the Japanese government’s proposal of its African Hometown Initiative, in which a number of cities are designated as hubs to African countries to engage in temporary training exchanges. Misunderstandings stirred fears of mass immigration and visa relaxations, fueling nationalist sentiments and slogans like “Protect the Japanese people.” The far-right “Japanese First” party, which saw electoral gains recently, has amplified these calls. Although authorities clarified that there are no visa relaxations, the locals who are fed up with the increasing living standards and the crime associated with migrants stepped up the protests. The government is in a fragile balancing act as anti-immigration grows just like in Australia and Europe.
Brazil: Anti-Government Mass Protests Due to Corruption and Inequality
Thousands of people were present in the streets of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo calling out to the presidency of Eduardo Silva over new corruption scandals and deteriorating economic inequality. Austerity measures were denounced by protesters, such as labor unions and community groups, who demanded more social protection. Demonstrations became violent at some point with reported clashes between the police and protestors who wanted clear governance and accelerated reforms to tackle poverty and inflation.
Iran: Protest Against New Dress Code
As women in cities like Tehran and Isfahan, the protests demonstrate the current fight against oppressive dress codes inflicted by conservative authorities. These weeks-long protests resumed this September with defiant symbolic actions of Iranian women unveiling themselves publicly. The movement, which is supported by global human rights organisations, fights against basic freedoms and g/ender equality in the face of brutal suppression by state security forces.
UK: Protests and Strikes Over Schemes and Conditions
Workers in the UK, nurses as well as teachers and transport workers, increased nationwide strikes to fight against the deteriorating working conditions and government schemes to reduce pensions and health benefits. Significant cities in the UK, such as London and Manchester, were struck, disrupting the transport and healthcare services of the populace. The unions maintain that more strikes will follow until substantial negotiation with government leaders will be initiated.
Sudan: Civil Unrest due to Economic Crisis.
Protests continue to increase in Sudan where the citizens and the labor movements are protesting against the soaring inflation and shortages of fuel and basic amenities. Several deaths and arrests in Khartoum and its surroundings have been as a result of violent clashes. Demonstrators are seeking a change in politics and alleviation of economic pressure during a vulnerable political transition following the military coup earlier this year.
These movements echo the global upheaval caused by economic distress, political discontent and by rights and reform requests- things that resonate strongly with young people, in India and in other parts of the world.
Disrupted Education Worldwide During the Protests
The impact of these international protests has resonated far into the education systems of the globe. Universities and schools in such nations as France, Serbia, and Sudan have been closed, struck, or disrupted to disrupt the lives of millions of school and university students. An example is Romania, where thousands of teachers went on strike in response to a higher workload and a reduction in the budget, starting to cancel classes in the country as early as September 2025. Such pedagogical interruptions state the susceptibility of teaching and learning surroundings to socio-political disturbances on the grander level. Among Indian students, where infrastructural shortages and unequal quality is already an issue, the necessity to deal with educational resilience is more urgent than ever.
Youth and Student Involvement Beyond Protests into Education
Although most protesters are young people, their participation does not affect only demonstrations in education. Increasingly, youth activists across the world are insisting that the curriculum needs to be changed to cover social justice, climate change and human rights and call on the education institutions to train students not only in their academic subjects but also as responsible members of the global community.
In India too, these demands are reflected in efforts such as climate protests or the need to have inclusive curricula. Higher education is witnessing a reshaping of the role of education in society by calls to teach civic education more, and support student activism, demonstrating how this is broadening the role of education in society.
Global Solidarity Movements are Echoing Change in India
Indian youth and civil society are not left behind in this wave of International activism. Protests are backed by solidarity marches and awareness campaigns online and offline in Nepal, France, and other countries. There is a new wave of solidarity in global protests as social media platforms have become the center of transnational youth networks exchanging stories and strategies. This network enables Indian students to feel their plight is viewed all over the globe and it helps them get empathy as they are also encouraged to take action contextually relevant in their communities and campuses.
The protests that have taken the world by storm in 2025 are a turning point brought about by genZ. Governments are under increasing pressure to respond through reforms that would not only respond to political grievances, but also to education accessibility, job opportunities and social equity.
To Indian youth, this means a future will be one in which activism and education become inseparable: lessons of peaceful protest, digital literacy, and active civic engagement will shape policymaking and personal destiny. Educational systems have to change to nurture GenZ and empower them to focus their energy on positive, democratic transformation.
More Voices on Streets: Major Protests Happening Globally And Its Impact on Education
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