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  1. More stable emotions can lead to political action and make repression ineffective. Feelings of solidarity increase the commitment of activists under repression (Hirsch, 1990) and can lead to escalation of political participation (McAdam, 1990). Affective emotions are often intertwined with group identity.

  2. Repression has been defined as the tendency to inhibit—consciously or unconsciously—the experience and expression of negative emotions or unpleasant cognitions in order to prevent one’s positive self-image from being threatened.

  3. For left‐wing respondents, we generally observe no effect of emotions on trust in the government, while extreme right‐wing respondents display the strongest effects with trust in government increasing or decreasing considerably depending on their emotional state.

  4. Sep 6, 2022 · Our paper focuses on the strategic interactions between motivations in collective action and the choice of repression by the state. However, to show broader applications and the flexibility of our framework, we now extend the base model to consider the resiliency of rebel groups to early setbacks.

  5. The following study integrates these findings by linking repression to emotional levels among the target population, which are in turn associated with protest behaviour. Our agent-based model is developed from new research on dissident reasoning (Dornschneider Reference Dornschneider 2021a).

  6. Jul 25, 2007 · Repression has been defined as the tendency to inhibit—consciously or unconsciously—the experience and expression of negative emotions or unpleasant cognitions in order to prevent one’s positive self-image from being threatened.

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  8. Jan 22, 2015 · Expressive suppression may have no effect on negative emotional experience (Egloff et al. 2006; Gross and Levenson 1993), may be effective for reducing negative feelings (Webb et al. 2012), or may even increase negative affect (Brans et al. 2013).

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