We use cookies in order to improve the quality and usability of the HSE website. More information about the use of cookies is available here, and the regulations on processing personal data can be found here. By continuing to use the site, you hereby confirm that you have been informed of the use of cookies by the HSE website and agree with our rules for processing personal data. You may disable cookies in your browser settings.
3 Krivokolenny Pereulok, Moscow, 103070.
Phones:
8 (495) 772-95-90 *22833,
8 (495) 772-95-90 *22448
Fax: 8 (495) 772-95-90 *12556
Email: politfac@hse.ru
Washington: Free Russia, 2018.
Petrov N., Hale H. E., Lipman M.
Russian Politics. 2019. Vol. 4. No. 2. P. 168-195.
In bk.: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics (Living Edition). Oxford University Press. P. 1-20.
Sorokina A., Maximenkova M., Kasamara V.
Political Science. PS. Высшая школа экономики, 2019. No. 71.
This book analyzes social movements across a range of countries in the non-Western world: Bosnia, Brazil, Egypt, India, Iran, Palestine, Russia, Syria, Turkey and Ukraine in the period 2008 to 2016. The individual case studies investigate how political and social goals are framed nationally and globally, and the types of mobilization strategies used to pursue them. The studies also assess how, in the age of transnationalism, the idea of participatory democracy produces new collective-action frames and mass-mobilization strategies.
The book challenges the view that most social movements unequivocally seek to achieve higher levels of democratization. Instead, the authors argue that protesters across different movements advocate more involved forms of citizen participation, since passive representation through liberal democratic institutions fails to address mass grievances and demands for accountability in many countries.