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Emotional Responses to State Repression Predict Collective Climate Action Intentions
As climate activism has expanded, governments have increasingly repressed disruptive but non-violent protests. Yet evidence remains mixed regarding whether repression inhibits or galvanizes activism. In this study, we examine how anticipated and experienced repression predict intentions to engage in normative (rule-conforming) and non-normative (rule-violating) collective climate action, over and above past activism and core psychological antecedents. Survey data from Extinction Rebellion UK mailing-list subscribers (N = 1,375) showed that experienced repression positively predicted non-normative action intentions, and showed a positive indirect predictive effect on non-normative action via reduced fear. Although anticipated repression was not directly associated with either action type, it had positive indirect predictive effects on both action types via anger/outrage, and on non-normative action via contempt. Conversely, it also had a negative indirect predictive effect on non-normative action through heightened fear. These findings predominantly reflect a galvanizing effect of repression on disruptive collective climate action among committed activists.
Emotional Responses to State Repression Predict Collective Climate Action Intentions
As climate activism has expanded, governments have increasingly repressed disruptive but non-violent protests. Yet evidence remains mixed regarding whether repression inhibits or galvanizes activism. In this study, we examine how anticipated and experienced repression predict intentions to engage in normative (rule-conforming) and non-normative (rule-violating) collective climate action, over and above past activism and core psychological antecedents. Survey data from Extinction Rebellion UK mailing-list subscribers (N = 1,375) showed that experienced repression positively predicted non-normative action intentions, and showed a positive indirect predictive effect on non-normative action via reduced fear. Although anticipated repression was not directly associated with either action type, it had positive indirect predictive effects on both action types via anger/outrage, and on non-normative action via contempt. Conversely, it also had a negative indirect predictive effect on non-normative action through heightened fear. These findings predominantly reflect a galvanizing effect of repression on disruptive collective climate action among committed activists.
| Date made available | 13 Jan 2026 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Zenodo |
Research output
- 1 Article
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Emotional responses to state repression predict collective climate action intentions
Davies-Rommetveit, S., Douch, J., Gardner, P., Sach, A., Thomas-Walters, L. & Tausch, N., 24 Feb 2026, (E-pub ahead of print) In: Nature Climate Change. Early View, p. 1-10Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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