“…The argument proceeds in three steps: In the first section, I argue that far from being a merely defensive act of protest of individual rights-bearers against governments and political majorities that transgress the limits established by constitutionally guaranteed moral principles and values, civil disobedience has historically been and continues to be a potentially much more radical political practice. This practice is transformative in that it is aiming at the politicization of questions that are excluded from the political domain and is directed at reconfiguring public space and existing institutions, often in comprehensive ways (see Celikates, 2014Celikates, , 2016aCelikates, , 2016b. While this is true for many cases of civil disobedience in the national framework-think of the classical, but often misrepresented, case of Martin Luther King and the US Civil Rights Movement, or more recently of the so-called Arab Spring and the Occupy movements, the radically transformative potential of civil disobedience becomes even more evident once we turn to the transnational domain.…”