Dictionary Definition
seditious adj
1 arousing to action or rebellion [syn: incendiary, incitive, inflammatory, instigative, rabble-rousing]
2 in opposition to a civil authority or
government [syn: insurgent, subversive]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- of, related to, or being involved in sedition; treasonous or subversive
Extensive Definition
- This is about the law term. For other uses see Sedition (disambiguation)
Sedition is a term of law which refers to covert conduct,
such as speech
and organization,
that is deemed by the legal authority as tending toward insurrection against the
established order. Sedition often includes subversion
of a constitution
and incitement of
discontent (or resistance) to lawful
authority. Sedition may include any commotion, though not aimed at
direct and open violence against the laws. Seditious words in
writing are seditious
libel.
Because sedition is typically considered a
subversive act, the overt acts that may be prosecutable under
sedition laws vary from one legal code to another. Where those
legal codes have a traceable history, there is also a record of the
change of definition for what constituted sedition at certain
points in history. This overview has served to develop a sociological definition of
sedition as well, within study of persecution.
The difference between sedition and treason consists primarily in
the subjective ultimate object of the violation to the public
peace. Sedition does not
consist of levying war against a government nor of adhering to its
enemies, giving enemies aid, and giving enemies comfort. Nor does
it consist, in most representative
democracies, of peaceful protest against a government,
nor of attempting to change the government by democratic means (such as
direct
democracy or
constitutional convention).
Put simply, sedition is the stirring up of
rebellion against the government in power. Treason is the violation
of allegiance to one's sovereign or state and has to do with giving
aid to enemies or levying war. Sedition is more about encouraging
the people to rebel, where treason is actually betraying the
country.
History
Sedition in its modern meaning first appeared in the Elizabethan Era (c. 1590) as the "notion of inciting by words or writings disaffection towards the state or constituted authority". "Sedition complements treason and martial law: while treason controls primarily the privileged, ecclesiastical opponents, priests, and Jesuits, as well as certain commoners; and martial law frightens commoners, sedition frightens intellectuals."Australia
Australia's sedition laws were amended in anti-terrorism legislation passed on 6 December 2005, updating definitions and increasing penalties.In late 2006, the Howard
government proposed plans to amend Australia's Crimes
Act 1914, introducing laws that mean artists and writers may be
jailed for up to seven years if their work was considered seditious
or inspired sedition either deliberately or accidentally. Opponents
of these laws have suggested that they could be used against
legitimate dissent.
Over the past year, Australian attorney-general
Philip Ruddock has rejected calls by two reports — from a Senate
committee and the
Australian Law Reform Commission — to limit the sedition
provisions in the
Anti-Terrorism Act 2005 by requiring proof of intention to
cause disaffection or violence. He has also brushed aside
recommendations to curtail new clauses outlawing “urging conduct”
that “assists” an “organisation or country engaged in armed
hostilities” against the Australian
military.
The new laws, inserted into the legislation last
December, allow for the criminalization of basic expressions of
political opposition, including supporting resistance to Australian
military interventions, such as those in Afghanistan,
Iraq and the
Asia-Pacific
region.
Canada
During World War II former Mayor of Montreal Camillien Houde campaigned against conscription in Canada. On August 2, 1940, Houde publicly urged the men of Quebec to ignore the National Registration Act. Three days later, he was placed under arrest by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police on charges of sedition. After being found guilty, he was confined in internment camps in Petawawa, Ontario and Gagetown, New Brunswick until 1944. Upon his release on August 18, 1944, he was greeted by a cheering crowd of 50,000 Montrealers and won back his job as Montreal mayor in 1944's civic election.New Zealand
In New Zealand's first sedition trial in decades, Tim Selwyn was convicted of sedition (section 83 of the Crimes Act 1961) on 8 June 2006.In September 2006, the New Zealand Police laid a
sedition charge against a Rotorua youth,
Christopher Russell, 17, who was also charged with threatening to
kill. The Police withdrew the sedition charge when Russell agreed
to plead guilty on the other charge.
In March 2007, Mark Paul Deason, 32, manager of a
tavern near the University
of Otago, was charged with seditious intent although he was
later granted police diversion when he pleaded guilty to publishing
a document which encourages public disorder Deason ran a promotion
for his Tavern that offered 1 litre of beer for 1 litre petrol. At
the end of the promotion, the prize would have been a couch soaked
in the petrol. It is presumed the intent was for the couch to be
burned — a popular university student prank. Police also applied
for Deason's liquor license to be revoked.
Following a recommendation from the
New Zealand Law Commission, the New Zealand government
announced on 7
May 2007
that the sedition law would be repealed. The
Crimes (Repeal of Seditious Offences) Amendment Bill was passed
on 24
October 2007, and entered into
force on 1
January 2008.
Panama
The opposition group, "Cruzada Civilista" (Civic
Crusade), to the dictatorial military government of Manuel Antonio
Noriega in the 80’s was proudly auto denominated “the sedition”.
Panama ideology was divided in two big groups: people supporting
the CIA imposed
regime in Panama and all the
people against this regime.
Today, under the government of Martin
Torrijos, the “Cruzada Civilista” seditious group is being
started to be mentioned again because Panama is having a return to
some military tendencies, again impulsed by USA international
policies.
United States
There have been a number of attempts in the
United States to regulate speech that has been deemed seditious. In
1798, President John Adams
signed into law the Alien
and Sedition Acts, the fourth of which, the Sedition Act or "An
Act for the Punishment of Certain Crimes against the United States"
set out punishments of up to two years' imprisonment for "opposing
or resisting any law of the United States" or writing or publishing
"false, scandalous, and malicious writing" about the
President or Congress
(but specifically not the
Vice-President). The act was allowed to expire in 1801 after
the election of Thomas
Jefferson, Vice President at the time of the Act's
passage.
The Espionage
Act of 1917 may also be considered a sedition law of sorts, as
section 3 made it a crime, punishable by 20 years' imprisonment and
a fine of up to $10,000, to wilfully spread false news of the US
military with an intent to disrupt their operations, to foment
mutiny in the ranks, or obstruct recruiting. The act was amended in
1918 with the Sedition
Act, which expanded the purview of the Espionage Act to any
statements made criticizing the government. The act was upheld in
1919 in Schenck
v. United States, but was repealed largely in 1921, leaving
mostly laws forbidding espionage and allowing military censorship of sensitive
material.
In 1940, the Alien Registration Act or Smith Act was
passed, which made it a crime to advocate or teach the desirability
of overthrowing the United States Government, or to be a member of
any organization which does the same. It was often used against
Communist
organizations. The act was invoked in three major trials, one of
the Socialist
Worker's Party in Minneapolis in
1941, resulting in 23 convictions, and again in 1944 in what became
known as "The Great Sedition Trial", of pro-Nazi figures which
ended in a mistrial. A
series of trials of 140 leaders of the Communist
Party USA was also predicated upon the Smith Act beginning in
1949, and lasting until 1957. Although the
Supreme Court upheld the convictions of 11 CPUSA leaders in
1951, the court reversed itself in 1957 in Yates
v. United States by ruling that teaching an ideal, no matter
how inimical that onlookers may view it to the United States, does
not equal advocating or planning its implementation.
Although unused since at least 1961, the Smith
Act remains US law.
Laura Berg, a nurse at a
Dept of Veterans' Affairs hospital in New Mexico was
investigated for sedition in September 2005 after writing a letter
to the editor of a local newspaper, criticizing the government,
although this was by her human resources department, not the
government. Ms Berg was represented by the ACLU. Charges were
dropped in 2006http://www.reason.com/news/show/117345.html.
See also
Notes and references
- Breight, Curtis, C. Surveillance, militarism and drama in the Elizabethan Era, Macmillian 1996: London.
seditious in Spanish: Sedición
seditious in Swedish: Uppvigling
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alienated, breakaway, contumacious, disaffected, disloyal, dissident, extreme, extremistic, factious, faithless, inflammatory, insurgent, insurrectionary,
insurrectionist,
lawless, mutineering, mutinous, perfidious, rabble-rousing,
rebel, rebellious, refractory, revolutional, revolutionary, riotous, seditionary, subversive, traitorous, treacherous, treasonable, turbulent, turncoat, unfaithful, violent