Abstract
ABSTRACT Research on protest proximity and public attitudes about protests is limited. This study examines the association between proximity to anti-fracking protests, attitudes about protest disruption and perceptions about hydraulic fracturing risks. Data used to examine these associations are based on a representative sample of UK adults, some of whom reside in communities where sustained direct-action anti-fracking protests occur. Across the sample of UK residents, a decrease in proximity to anti-fracking protests is associated with an increase in perceptions that protests are disruptive. Moreover, as concerns about disruptive protests increase, perceptions that hydraulic fracturing is risky decrease. Nevertheless, perceptions of disruption and fracking risks are unrelated among a sub-sample of residents living closest to protests. These findings add to the protest proximity literature by emphasising that disruptive protests do not always detract from social movement messages.
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