Municipal Response: A Framework for Local Government

8 min

← Back to Institutional Response

Dutch municipalities are often the first institutional responders to antisemitic incidents in public spaces, schools, and community settings. Yet many lack the frameworks and training to respond effectively.

Municipal Responsibilities

Under Dutch law, municipalities have several relevant obligations: - Maintaining public order and safety (Gemeentewet) - Anti-discrimination policy (national anti-discrimination legislation) - Operating local anti-discrimination bureaus (antidiscriminatievoorzieningen) - Coordinating with police on hate crimes - Managing public spaces where antisemitism may occur (demonstrations, public events)

The Integrated Response Model

Effective municipal response integrates multiple departments:

Public order: Mayor's office, police liaison, demonstration management **Social affairs**: Anti-discrimination bureau, community relations, social workers **Education**: School oversight, youth programs, prevention initiatives **Communications**: Public statements, community engagement, media relations

Response Framework by Context

Public demonstrations: Municipalities can impose conditions on demonstrations under the Wet openbare manifestaties (Public Manifestations Act). When demonstrations include antisemitic elements, the mayor can: - Impose conditions requiring removal of antisemitic signage or speech - Deploy observers to document violations - End demonstrations that violate imposed conditions - Refer criminal violations to police

Schools: Municipal education departments should: - Ensure schools have anti-discrimination protocols - Support schools in addressing antisemitic incidents - Facilitate cooperation between schools and anti-discrimination bureaus - Fund educational programs on antisemitism

Public spaces: When antisemitic graffiti, vandalism, or incidents occur: - Rapid removal of antisemitic graffiti (within 24 hours) - Police report for every incident - Community notification and reassurance - Investigation and follow-up

Building Municipal Capacity

  • Designate a discrimination coordinator with cross-departmental authority
  • Train municipal staff in antisemitism recognition
  • Establish reporting protocols between departments and with police
  • Engage local Jewish communities in safety planning
  • Publish annual reports on discrimination incidents and responses
  • Participate in national networks for best practice sharing