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This paper sets out a repertoire of repression operating to criminalise and repress recent climate and environmental protest globally. Deploying a novel mixed methods approach, involving a comparative quantitative and qualitative analysis of a sample of 14 countries, we identify that repression and criminalisation are global phenomena – spanning the Global South and North. The repertoire of repression includes: i) enactments of new anti-protest laws; ii) creative and strategic use of existing legislation and legal processes; iii) police action, such as arrests, surveillance, harassment and other forms of police violence; iv) disappearances and killings; and v) vilification. We argue that this repression is a complex eco-system involving state and non-state actors, laws and legal processes, social and media discourses which operate to deplete, deter and delegitimise protest, and distract attention from violent or harmful political structures.
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Chris Rossdale
University of Bristol
Oscar Berglund
University of Bristol
Christina Pantazis
University of Bristol
Environmental Politics
University of Bristol
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Rossdale et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1003c6d8c5cf602efd83d5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2025.2602416