Bulgaria’s winter protests against a controversial 2026 budget and entrenched corruption have been driven not only by politics but by culture. Young demonstrators, many protesting for the first time, were mobilised by artists, musicians and digital influencers who turned posts into calls to action. From actors and pop stars on the streets to vloggers translating outrage into everyday language, culture became a key engine of collective action.
Morocco’s Gen Z protests, ignited on September 27, 2025, have become the country’s largest youth-led uprising since the Arab Spring. Sparked by deaths linked to hospital failures, thousands have taken to the streets demanding healthcare, education, and job reforms. Facing violent crackdowns and arrests, young Moroccans are joined by artists and activists, turning creativity into resistance and calling for a new social contract.
In September and October 2025, Madagascar’s youth ignited a historic uprising blending art, activism, and digital mobilization. Known as the Gen Z Madagascar movement, it united online creativity with civic resistance against corruption, inequality, and state repression. Through memes, music, and visual art, young protesters turned cultural expression into a force for democratic transformation.