Preparing for repression

Contents

Preparing for repression is the process of taking precautionary measures to minimize the impact of repression. Repression often hits hardest when we're least prepared. Such preparation may seem emotionally draining, but we find that it actually allows us to act more freely. Preparing for repression can have practical or psychological dimensions.

Examples of practical preparation include:

Examples of psychological preparation include:

Techniques addressed by this mitigation

NameDescription
House raid

You can prepare for repression to minimize the impact of house raids.

Physical violence

If you or members of your network are at risk of being tortured by an adversary, you can prepare for that risk. For example, you can:

  • Set up communication protocols that allow learning as quickly as possible when someone is arrested, in order to take immediate steps to:
    • Protect the arrested person. In some contexts where torture is limited to the first hours or days of detention, putting pressure on the adversary as soon as possible after the arrest (e.g. by involving lawyers or journalists) may help to stop the torture or limit the severity of the acts of torture.
    • Protect those who are still free, in case the arrested person “talks.” This will depend on what the arrested person knows, and can include abandoning safe houses, discontinuing projects, entering clandestinity, etc.
  • Prepare psychologically to resist torture.

See “Under the Enemy's Blade: A Search for Anarchist Practices Against Torture” about practices against torture.