Social mobilizations and the question of social justice in contemporary Russia |
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Authors: | Karine Clément |
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Affiliation: | 1. St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia;2. Andrew Gagarin Centre for Civil Society and Human Rights, St. Petersburg, Russiacarine_clement@hotmail.com |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTNotwithstanding stereotypes of Russian apathy, long-term field research reveals that there have always been grassroots and labour protests in post-Soviet Russia, even as the shock of ultraliberal reforms led to mass precariousness and social disorientation. However, the social mobilizations that do occur are scattered, weakly publicized and mostly small-scale. This paper conceptualizes them as ‘everyday activism’, that is, an activism embedded in everyday life experience and pragmatic sense. Only recently, and in a paradoxical relation to the populist and patriotic Kremlin discourse, some new trends have emerged towards other popular variants of the new discourse that includes social equality claims and what the paper calls ‘social critical’ populism. However, this populism from below does not automatically lead to mass mobilization, although it provides the necessary background for it. |
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Keywords: | Mobilizations neoliberalism populism precarization social justice |
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