02
Venues, Publishers & Festivals
Equipping institutions to handle boycott campaigns fairly, transparently and within the law.
Key Tools
What to do and what not to do.
Does your organisation have a Freedom of Expression Policy?
Who signs off on cancellations or withdrawals?
Do you record all external pressure campaigns?
How to handle public protest, media outrage or staff petitions.
Escalation points: when to involve legal, PR or board members.
Venue Checklist for Safety & Reputation
Sample Freedom of Expression Policies.
Sample Sponsorship Policy Templates plus Decision Matrix to assess next steps when funding ties are under attack.
Communications Templates for responding to boycott letters.
Breach of contract implications.
Equality Act & Charity Commission duties.
Handling protest without infringing civil liberties.
01.
Preparedness
Preparedness is about what institutions do before pressure arrives – because once a boycott campaign begins, the worst outcomes are usually already in motion.
Drawing on anonymised cases across theatre, music and literature, this chapter shows that the greatest damage rarely comes from protest itself, but from fear-driven decisions: silence replacing leadership, informal pressure displacing governance, and optics overriding process.
These failures are not inevitable. They are predictable, repeatable and preventable with clear policy, discipline and resolve.
How institutions create the worst outcomes under boycott pressure
1. Replace decisions with silence
What happens
- No formal cancellation
- Marketing quietly withdrawn
- Work left to fail
What it causes
- Manufactured failure
- Informal blame and rumours
- De facto blacklisting
Leadership reminder
Silence is still a decision – and the least defensible one.
2. Let staff pressure substitute for governance
What happens
- Informal concerns escalate
- Petitions become vetoes
- Leadership authority drifts
What it causes
- Governance breakdown
- Loss of trust and clarity
- Increased risk
Leadership reminder
Listening is not the same as delegating authority.
3. Punish lawful speech to signal values
What happens
- Lawful or private speech becomes public
- Institutions cancel wholesale
- Decisions framed as “values-led”
What it causes
- Disproportionate response
- Legal and reputational exposure
- Culture of fear
Leadership reminder
Values-based language does not replace due process.
4. Act covertly, then scramble when exposed
What happens
- Work quietly withdrawn
- No public explanation
- Artist later goes public
What it causes
- Escalation
- Loss of credibility
- Scrutiny of governance
Leadership reminder
Lack of transparency increases risk when problems arise.
5. Cancel event to avoid imagined futures
What happens
- Pre-emptive withdrawal
- Decisions driven by anticipated backlash
What it causes
- Escalation rather than containment
- Regret once pressure fades
Leadership reminder
Most pressure is temporary. Bad decisions last.
Leadership essentials to remember
When institutions falter, the pattern is often familiar: fear replaces process, silence replaces accountability, and optics replace governance, while artists absorb the damage. These outcomes are not inevitable – they are the result of choices.
- Quiet withdrawal is still cancellation
- Internal pressure is not governance
- Lawful speech is not misconduct
- Transparency is safer than silence
- Maintaining process is leadership
Common Institutional Failures Under Boycott Pressure
The following failures recur in damaging responses to boycott campaigns. They are failures of process, not intention. Recognising them early can prevent serious damage.
Panic apologies
Apologising before establishing facts, legal position or contractual duties.
Result: implied wrongdoing, harm to artists, loss of credibility.
Reframing reputational anxiety as safety
Treating offence or protest as physical or legal risk
Result: unnecessary cancellation and erosion of free expression.
Staff capture and informal decision-making
Letting informal groups, social media pressure or petitions determine results.
Result: breakdown of governance and leadership
authority.
Pre-emptive cancellation
Withdrawing work to avoid anticipated criticism
rather than actual risk.
Result: escalation, loss of trust and later regret.
Speaking for artists without consultation
Making statements about artists’ intentions or beliefs without their involvement.
Result: artist isolation and reputational damage.
Changing rules mid-process
Altering criteria, policies or sponsorship terms during
controversy.
Result: unfairness and long-term institutional
damage.
Over-explaining
Issuing multiple statements or moral justifications
Result: prolonged controversy and increased
vulnerability.
Checklist: Institutional Preparedness
Preparedness means putting clear policies and processes in place before problems arise, so you can respond calmly and consistently under pressure. This includes visible freedom of expression and governance policies, clear contracts, crisis and communications plans, trained staff and spokespersons, early legal advice and post-event review. These measures reduce risk, prevent panic decisions and build long-term institutional confidence.
Item
Notes
- Freedom of Expression Policy adopted and publicly visible
- Sponsorship, Gifts, Venue Hire and Donations policy adopted and publicly available
- Crisis response plan in place
Includes legal, comms, and security
- Security plan reviewed with professional input (via FITA referral if needed)
Ensures safe continuation of events
- Staff training delivered annually
Covers protest handling & free speech
- Artist and sponsor contracts include free-speech clauses
Prevents arbitrary withdrawal
- Template public statements pre-approved
For rapid response
- Communications plan for boycotts and activism
Clarifies internal process
- Legal counsel familiar with boycott and discrimination issues
Early advice is essential
- Designated spokesperson(s) trained
Consistency of message
- Post-event review template
Builds institutional learning
02.
Crisis Protocol Process: How to Respond to Boycott or Cancellation Pressure
This process provides a clear, step-by-step process for decision-makers. It ensures that institutional responses are proportionate, lawful and consistent with freedom of expression.
Stage 1 – Receive & Record
Trigger:
A petition, open letter, protest threat or email campaign calls on your organisation to drop an artist, event or sponsor.
Action:
- Acknowledge internally, don’t rush to reply publicly.
- Log all correspondence (emails, posts, screenshots, press inquiries).
- Notify key staff: CEO/Director, Comms, Legal and Artistic leads.
- Assign a single point of contact for all responses.
Stage 2 – Assess
Key questions:
- Is this a safety issue (credible threats, risk to staff or audiences)?
- Is it reputational (media or social pressure)?
- Is it contractual (partner or sponsor objection)?
- Is it ideological (political disagreement, boycott demand)?
Action:
- Assess risk and legal context before making any decision.
- Consult your Freedom of Expression Policy (or FITA’s model version).
- Seek legal advice if discrimination, contractual or public order issues arise.
FITA can also provide confidential advice or referral to professional security consultants. The aim is not to cancel, but to ensure that the event can proceed safely – with clear briefings for staff, front-of-house and performers.
A well-prepared venue is often the best defence against intimidation or misinformation.
Stage 3 – Convene a Core Response Group
Recommended members:
- Artistic Director / Head of Programming
- CEO or Senior Management
- Communications/Press Lead
- Legal/HR Advisor
- External PR or Legal Counsel (if needed)
Purpose:
- Review facts, policies, contracts and potential consequences.
- Agree on who speaks, what is said and when.
- Ensure alignment between artistic and institutional values.
Stage 4 – Communicate Internally
Action:
- Brief staff clearly before making public statements.
- Emphasise that your organisation supports artistic freedom and safety for all staff.
- Keep internal discussions confidential to prevent misinformation.
- Provide staff with a line to take if questioned externally.
Stage 5 – Respond Externally
Choose one of three paths, depending on context:
Clarification Response:
- For mild public pressure or misinformation.
- Short, factual, non-defensive clarification.
Public statement:
- For widespread media interest or organised protest.
- Balanced tone, emphasising due process, safety and freedom of expression.
Action Response:
- If genuine security or legal grounds exist for change (e.g. credible threats).
- All actions documented, legally advised and communicated transparently.
Stage 6 – Record & Review
After the event:
Document what happened, including:
- Timeline of decisions
- Internal discussions
- Public reactions
Review the response with your team:
- Were values upheld?
- Were communications effective?
- What can be improved next time?
Venue Checklist for Safety & Reputation
Use this checklist when your venue, festival or institution is facing boycott pressure, public campaigns or demands to cancel or withdraw work.
You do not need to complete every step. Use what is relevant to your situation.
01. Pause and Hold Process
Do not respond publicly immediately
Avoid apologising or signalling decisions before facts are established
Confirm who holds decision making authority
Activate agreed internal protocols
Speed increases risk. Process protects everyone.
02. Assess Safety Separately from Reputational Pressure
Identify whether there are credible threats or legal risks
Distinguish protest, offence or disagreement from safety concerns
Document any threats or incidents clearly
If needed, seek professional security advice to enable the event to proceed safely
Discomfort is not risk. Protest is not harm.
03. Protect Artists and Contributors
Inform artists early that pressure is being received
Consult artists before issuing any public statements
Do not speak on artists’ behalf without agreement
Consider how staff and front-of-house can shield artists during events
Artists should not carry institutional risk alone.
04. Contain Communications
Nominate a single spokesperson
Brief staff clearly and early
Use a short holding statement if required
Avoid multiple statements or moral explanations
Less said publicly often reduces escalation.
05. Record and Document
Log all correspondence, complaints and pressure
Keep a clear record of decisions and rationales
Retain copies of contracts and policies
Assume records may be reviewed later
Good records support good governance.
06. Check Governance and Legal Duties
Review contractual obligations before changing plans
Confirm compliance with charity law, equality law and employment duties
Ensure decisions sit with the correct governance body
Seek independent legal advice if cancellation or withdrawal is proposed
Reputational fear is not a legal instruction.
07. Consider Reputational Impact Carefully
Ask whether cancellation would escalate rather than contain pressure
Consider long-term trust with artists and audiences
Avoid actions that imply wrongdoing where none is established
Remember that most campaigns are short-lived
Reputation is often damaged more by panic than
protest.
08. Review and Learn
Once pressure subsides, review what happened
Identify what worked and what increased risk
Update internal protocols if needed
Brief boards and senior staff for future readiness
Learning strengthens institutional resilience.
Remember
You are not required to arbitrate political disputes in order to present art. Responsible leadership means holding clear processes, protecting artists as part of reputational care and responding calmly and proportionately – all of which reduce risk rather than increase it.
03.
Sample Policies and Templates
These documents provide practical frameworks and templates to support arts and cultural organisations in managing funding relationships, public scrutiny and complex decision making. They include sample Freedom of Expression policies, a sponsorship policy template and a decision making matrix designed for situations where funding ties come under challenge or concern.
Together they are intended to help organisations make clear, consistent and defensible decisions that balance financial sustainability, ethical considerations and reputational impact while maintaining a strong commitment to freedom of expression within the law.
Sample Policies and Templates
04.
Legal Notes
Our Legal Notes provide practical discussion on the legal framework surrounding freedom of expression in the arts. Designed for cultural organisations, venues, employers and artists, we explain key principles under Article 10, the Equality Act 2010, public order law and the Employment Rights Act 2025, and offers structured questions to help navigate protest, reputational risk and competing rights.
Legal Notes is provided for general information only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for obtaining specialist advice on specific facts. The law in this area is complex, fast-moving and highly fact-sensitive, and organisations should seek independent legal advice before making decisions in live or contentious situations.
Legal Notes under construction
05.
Case Studies
Six case studies, from across the cultural sector, show how organisations respond to pressure around contentious speakers, artists or ideas. The case studies contrast those handled well – where clear principles and proportionate action reduced escalation – with those handled badly, where avoidance and informal decision-making caused more problems. Together, the cases highlight what actions build confidence and trust, and what undermines it.
Positive Outcome
Case Study 1:
Book festival stands firm under activist boycott
Setting
A UK book festival plans an International Women’s Day programme celebrating women writers from a range of backgrounds and perspectives. One invited speaker is known to hold gender-critical views.
What happened
Ahead of the festival, activists launch a boycott campaign, accusing the festival of “platforming harm”. Other invited writers and speakers are contacted directly and pressured to withdraw in solidarity. Several do.
The campaign escalates on social media, with calls for the festival to cancel the event or remove the speaker.
Response
- The festival leadership issues a clear, calm public statement affirming its commitment to freedom of expression and plural debate
- The festival confirms it will not withdraw invitations on the basis of lawful views
- Writers who choose to withdraw are allowed to do so without criticism or retaliation
- Vacant slots are filled with replacement speakers
- Staff and volunteers are briefed with a single agreed line
Outcome
The festival goes ahead as planned. Attendance remains strong. The boycott campaign loses momentum once it becomes clear the festival will not capitulate. The director later reflects that standing firm early prevented prolonged escalation.
What helped
- A clear institutional position stated early
- Calm refusal to engage in online argument
- Respecting individual withdrawals without conceding institutional ground
- Confidence in the festival’s purpose
Message for festivals
Standing up to bullying behaviour early often causes it to retreat.
Positive Outcome
Case Study 2:
Music venue reconsiders cancellation and protects free expression
Setting
A music venue schedules a gig by a band whose members are targeted online because of identity and perceived political associations.
What happened
Following complaints and pressure on social media, the venue initially considers cancelling the gig due to “reputational concerns”. The band is informed informally that the event may be withdrawn.
Response
- The band engages constructively with the venue’s management
- They explain the legal and contractual implications of cancellation
- They clarify the distinction between performing music and endorsing political positions
- The venue reviews its obligations and decision-making process
Outcome
The venue reverses its initial inclination to cancel. It issues a short, neutral statement affirming its commitment to artistic freedom and confirming the event will proceed.
The gig sells out. There are no safety issues. The venue later adopts clearer internal guidance on handling external pressure.
What helped
- Direct, calm dialogue between artist and venue
- Attention to legal and contractual responsibilities
- Avoiding public apologies or over-explanation
- A short, values-based statement
Message for venues
Understanding your responsibilities often clarifies your confidence.
Positive Outcome
Case Study 3:
Publisher enables Hebrew publication through creative resolution
Setting
A writer objects to their work being published in Hebrew, citing political concerns. A publisher has already planned a Hebrew-language edition with an international partner.
What happened
The author asks the publisher to prevent the Hebrew publication from going ahead. The request raises concerns about discrimination, contractual obligations and freedom of expression.
Response
- The publisher does not act unilaterally or publicly
- A constructive solution is proposed
- The author is offered the option to redirect their royalties from the Hebrew edition to a cross-community charity working across political and religious lines
- The publisher reaffirms its commitment to making literature available across languages
Outcome
The Hebrew edition is published. The author’s concerns are addressed without imposing restrictions on language or audience. The situation resolves without public controversy.
What helped
- Refusal to treat language as endorsement
- Creative problem-solving rather than confrontation
- Respect for both contractual obligations and individual conscience
- Keeping the issue out of the media
Message for publishers
Creative solutions can uphold freedom of expression while defusing conflict.
Why these cases matter
- Institutions held process under pressure
- Artists were protected rather than managed as risks
- Clear boundaries reduced escalation
- Confidence, not appeasement, resolved conflict
These are not exceptional cases. They show what happens when institutions trust their purpose and act proportionately.
Negative Outcome
Case Study 4:
The silent cancellation and informal blacklist
Setting
A publicly funded theatre programmes a new work by an artist whose views are rumoured internally to be “unacceptable”, despite no public controversy, complaint or breach of policy.
What happened
Before the show opens, senior staff raise concerns informally. No formal complaint is made, but internal pressure builds. Leadership fears potential backlash and possible legal consequences if the work is cancelled outright, as the artist is known to have professional support.
Rather than cancelling, the theatre quietly withdraws all marketing activity. There is no social media promotion, no press outreach and no education or audience engagement work. Internally, staff are discouraged from discussing the show.
Attendance is low. After the run, the poor box office is cited informally as evidence that the artist “failed”. Rumours circulate within the sector that the artist is “difficult” or “unpopular”.
What went wrong
- Informal staff pressure replaced due process
- Silence was used as a form of cancellation
- Reputational harm was created without accountability
- Failure was manufactured, then used as justification
Outcome
The artist’s work closes early and is not revived. No official explanation is given. The artist later discovers they are no longer being considered by other venues, despite positive reviews and no recorded complaint.
Why this is damaging
This approach avoids legal risk while creating maximum reputational harm. It enables informal blacklisting while preserving institutional deniability.
Anonymity note
This is a composite of multiple cases across theatre and dance. No specific venue, city or production is identifiable.
Negative Outcome
Case Study 5:
Private speech, public punishment
Setting
A musician is booked for a series of upcoming shows at a venue. In a private online chat, the musician makes a comment that is legal and commonplace but politically unfashionable.
What happened
Screenshots of the private chat are leaked online without context. A backlash follows, with demands for cancellation. The venue receives complaints accusing the musician of holding “harmful views”.
Without consulting legal advice or assessing proportionality, the venue cancels all scheduled performances by the artist. No opportunity is given for clarification or response. The cancellation is framed publicly as being “in line with our values”.
What went wrong
- Private speech was treated as a public offence
- No distinction was made between legality and popularity
- Collective punishment replaced individual assessment
- Values language was used to avoid process
Outcome
The musician loses income and future bookings. Other venues quietly withdraw invitations. The incident becomes a warning example within the sector about private speech.
The venue later struggles to articulate a clear policy on cancellation and faces criticism for acting disproportionately.
Why this is damaging
Punishing lawful private speech creates a climate of fear and self-censorship and exposes venues to serious reputational and legal risk.
Anonymity note
This case deliberately avoids naming platforms, genres or venues and reflects patterns seen across music, comedy and spoken word.
Negative Outcome
Case Study 6:
Quiet withdrawal becomes public controversy
Setting
A book festival programmes a strand exploring ideas around cancellation, dissent and free expression. A new book engaging directly with these themes is scheduled to be discussed.
What happened
Ahead of the festival, internal concerns are raised by staff that the book may “inflame tensions”. There is no external campaign, no complaints and no safety risk.
Rather than addressing the issue openly, senior leadership quietly removes the book from the programme. No public announcement is made. The author is told the decision is due to “programming considerations”.
The festival continues to promote itself publicly as a space for debate and dialogue.
The turning point
Unlike other cases, the artist chooses to go public.
The author publicly states that their book was withdrawn due to internal pressure and that no formal complaint or risk assessment was shared with them. The statement is factual, restrained and does not accuse individuals.
Venue response
The festival is now forced into a reactive position.
- Leadership issues a defensive public statement citing “staff wellbeing” and “complex internal discussions”
- No clear rationale for the withdrawal is provided
- The venue avoids addressing why the decision was taken covertly
The situation escalates, drawing more attention than the original programme item would have done.
Outcome
The festival’s credibility is questioned publicly. Trust with authors and audiences is damaged. Internally, staff remain unclear about who has decision-making authority.
The artist experiences both support and backlash but succeeds in exposing a lack of process.
What went wrong
- Internal dissent was allowed to function as a veto
- Programming decisions were made covertly rather than through governance
- Silence was used as a risk-management strategy
- Once the artist spoke publicly, the institution had no coherent process to defend
Why this is damaging
When institutions act quietly to avoid controversy, they often create greater controversy once decisions are exposed. Going public removes deniability and forces institutions to account for their process.
Key contrast with other cases
- In earlier worst-case examples, artists stayed silent and suffered reputational harm
- Here, the artist's free speech shifted risk back onto the institution
- The escalation was caused not by the artist speaking, but by the absence of transparent decision-making
Anonymity note
This is a composite case reflecting patterns across multiple festivals and publishers. It does not reference any specific organisation, location or individual.