The Politics of Fear: How Russia’s Rulers Counter their Rivals
暂无分享,去创建一个
This article attempts to analyze the mechanisms of political control used by the Kremlin vis-a-vis its rivals. Russian authorities had opted the politics of fear, which include overt intimidation and public discrediting of the regime’s critics, and selective persecution and open harassment of opposition activists and/or supporters. This approach to political control to some degree reproduced similar mechanisms that had enabled regime survival in the late Soviet period, and fit general trends of repressive policies in a number of contemporary authoritarian regimes. The article discusses causes and mechanisms of the politics of fear in contemporary Russia, its roots in comparative and historical contexts, and strengths and weaknesses of repressive policy in Russia from the viewpoints of the regime, the opposition, and Russian society.
[1] A. Przeworski,et al. Democracy and the Market: Political and Economic Reforms in Eastern Europe and , 2016 .
[2] V. Gel’man. Cracks in the Wall , 2013 .
[3] R. Potocki. Belarus: A Tale of Two Elections , 2011 .
[4] C. Davenport,et al. Multi-Dimensional Threat Perception and State Repression: An Inquiry into Why States Apply Negative Sanctions , 1995 .