“…Theory: security assistance, security forces with agency, and state violence While early scholarship on repression focused almost exclusively on the costs and benefits of employing repression for leaders, recent advances acknowledge the agency of the security sector-the military, police, and other security forces that must implement orders to forcibly repress dissent (Bell et al, 2021;DeMeritt, 2016). Assuming that leaders have incentives to call on the state's security forces to contain civilian mobilizations that threaten their hold on power, this literature asks when security forces are likely to comply with orders to use coercive force (Albrecht and Ohl, 2016;Poe, 2004;Tyson, 2018;DeMeritt, 2015;Dragu and Lupu, 2018;Frugé, 2019).…”