“Nudge theory” — the application of behavioral psychology to public policy — has become a cornerstone of modern governance. Governments worldwide now employ dedicated “nudge units” to shape citizen behavior without legislation, debate, or even public awareness.
The UK’s Behavioral Insights Team (the original “nudge unit”) has worked with over 30 governments globally, applying behavioral science to increase tax compliance, encourage vaccination, reduce energy consumption, and modify countless other behaviors.
“Nudging works by changing the choice architecture — the environment in which people make decisions — to steer them toward preferred outcomes while maintaining the illusion of free choice.”
During COVID-19, behavioral psychologists played a central role in designing fear-based messaging campaigns intended to increase compliance with lockdowns, masking, and vaccination. The UK’s SPI-B (Scientific Pandemic Insights Group on Behaviors) explicitly recommended using “hard-hitting emotional messaging” and promoting a sense of personal threat to drive compliance.
The manipulation of populations through psychological techniques — developed by governments with the help of academic psychologists — represents a fundamental violation of the informed consent principle that is supposed to underpin democratic governance.