Abstract

Does physical surveillance hinder or foster antiregime resistance? A common view holds that surveillance prevents resistance by providing regimes with high-quality intelligence on dissident networks and by instilling fear in citizens. We contrast this view using formerly classified data from Communist Poland. We find that communities exposed to secret police officers were more likely to organize protests but also engaged in less sabotage. To ensure that the relationship is causal, we use an instrumental variable strategy, which exploits the exogenous assignment of Catholic “spy priests” to local communities. To trace the underlying mechanisms, we draw on qualitative interviews and archival sources. We document that Poland’s comprehensive use of surveillance created widespread anger as well as an incentive for citizens to reveal their true loyalties, thus facilitating antiregime collective action. Once on the streets, protesters refrained from sabotage to signal their political motivation to bystanders and authorities alike.

Highlights

  • Authoritarian regimes around the globe use repression to secure their survival

  • The models control for variables that are constant across municipalities but vary over time

  • We briefly introduce two additional robustness tests for the instrumental variable (IV) model, which we detail in Online Appendix A.6

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Summary

Introduction

Authoritarian regimes around the globe use repression to secure their survival. Much has been written about violent forms of repression.. We mean “focused, systematic, and routine attention to personal details for purposes of influence, management, protection or direction” (Lyon 2007, 13). The dearth of evidence is surprising, given that physical surveillance constitutes one of the most consistently used measures of repression (Shelley 1996). In the former Eastern Bloc, regimes employed tens of thousands of agents to systematically spy on citizens (Gläßel and Paula 2019; Lichter, Löffler, and Siegloch 2021)

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