At a glance
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Burnout linked to extremist sympathies: On days employees felt more burnt out, they were more likely to justify extremist ideas, including violence against perceived injustices.
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Explained by psychological theories: Strain, loss of meaning, and a search for significance help explain why burnout can make radical beliefs more appealing.
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Support as prevention: Organisational support and early intervention reduce the risk, showing that fair, caring workplaces can protect against extremist attitudes.
A new study published in Psychology of Violence suggests workplace burnout may help explain why some people justify extreme violence.
Researchers surveyed over 600 employees daily, tracking burnout symptoms, emotions, and extremist attitudes. They found that on days when employees felt more burnt out, they reported stronger sympathy toward extremist ideas, including justifying violence against perceived injustices. Burnout often brought negative emotions such as fear, sadness, shame, and guilt. To escape these feelings, some individuals seemed to find extremist ideologies more appealing.
The team explained this through three psychological frameworks: General Strain Theory, which links daily frustrations to extremism through negative emotions; the existential model of burnout, which describes burnout as a failed search for meaning; and Significance Quest Theory, which suggests people turn to radical beliefs when personal significance is eroded.
Importantly, the study does not suggest burnout inevitably leads to violence. Instead, it shows how burnout can shift attitudes, normalising violent extremist views. As the researchers note, distinguishing between radicalisation of opinion and radicalisation of action is critical, since widespread extremist sympathies can still damage democracies by fostering division and undermining social cohesion.
With burnout affecting around three-quarters of employees, the potential for extremist attitudes to take root is significant. While only a small minority may engage in violence, even limited actions can have major consequences.
The study also highlighted the protective role of perceived organisational support. Employees who felt valued and cared for by their employers were less likely to adopt extremist views, even when struggling with burnout. However, support was most effective before negative emotions took hold, making early intervention essential.
The findings underscore the need for organisations to invest in prevention strategies – promoting fairness and transparency, recognising employees’ contributions, training managers to spot early signs of burnout, and creating safe channels for feedback. Beyond the workplace, broader perceptions of injustice in society can also intensify extremist sympathies, particularly when people are already mentally exhausted.
Ultimately, burnout is more than workplace fatigue. It reflects an existential vulnerability that, if ignored, can create fertile ground for radicalisation. A workplace that fails to offer meaning and recognition risks leaving employees to search for it elsewhere – with extremist ideologies often waiting to fill the void.
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The post Why Burnout Makes People More Vulnerable to Extremist Ideas first appeared on MQ Mental Health Research.