Temporal and Cross-Regional Variance in Environmental Protest Activity of Russians (2007–2021)

Temporal and Cross-Regional Variance in Environmental Protest Activity of Russians (2007–2021)


Semenov A.V.

Cand. Sci. (Pol.), Senior Research Fellow, Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, HSE St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg, Russia andre.semenoff@gmail.com

Snarski Ya.A.

Research Assistant, Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, HSE St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg, Russia yaroslaw1861@gmail.com

Tkacheva T. Yu.

PhD, Research Fellow, Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, HSE St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg, Russia tkacheva.tatyana@gmail.com

ID of the Article:


the study was supported by RSF grant No. 23-18-00661.


For citation:

Semenov A.V., Snarski Ya.A., Tkacheva T. Yu. Temporal and Cross-Regional Variance in Environmental Protest Activity of Russians (2007–2021). Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya [Sociological Studies]. 2024. No 2. P. 62-74



Abstract

The environmental movement in Russia has been a most institutionalized form of collective action. Originating from the Soviet period and gaining momentum in late 1980s, it survived the 1990s’ dramatic transformations as well as the changes in political opportunity structure in the 2000–2010s. Extant scholarship on environmental activism in Russia has been largely focused on casestudies of regional mass-mobilization, such as environmental campaigns at Shiyes station in Archangelsk. The paper represents the first systematic study of cross-regional variance in environmental collective action in Russia. Drawing on three datasets, we trace the general evolution of environmental protests in the period from 2007 to 2021 and provide a typology of Russian regions. The latter allows us to classify Russian regions by intensity and sustainability of eco-mobilisation. We demonstrate that, despite narrowing opportunities, the intensity of environmental protests during the last decade has been on the rise. The typology allows us to describe the existing variance and suggest new questions on the nature and factors of environmental protest activity in Russian regions.


Keywords
environmental activity; environmental movement; environmental conflicts; contentious politics; Russian regions

References

Comparative Perspectives on Social Movements: Political Opportunities, Mobilizing Structures, and Cultural Framings. (1996) Ed. by McAdam D., McCarthy J.D., Zald M.N. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Demchuk A.L. et al. (2022) Environmental conflict management: a comparative cross-cultural perspective of China and Russia. Post-­Communist Economies. Vol. 34. No. 7: 871–893.

Evans A.B. (2012) Protests and civil society in Russia: The struggle for the Khimki Forest. Communist and Post-­Communist Studies. Vol. 45. No. 3: 233–242.

Fomichev S.R. (1992) The greens: a look from inside. Polis. Politicheskiye issledovaniya [Polis. Political Studies]. No. 1: 238–245. (In Russ.)

GnatenkoA.A. (2010) Resources of ecological lobbying: reducing channels of influence? (Evidence from the “Ecoprotection” NGO, Kaliningrad region). Politicheskaya nauka [Political Science]. No. 2: 203–217. (In Russ.)

Golbraikh V.B. (2016) Ecological activism: new forms of political participation. In: Vlast i elity [Power and elites]. Vol. 3: 98–120. (In Russ.)

Golbraikh V.B. (2019) Ecofonclicts in Russia and Digital Netwroks Participation. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya [Sociological Studies]. No. 6: 74–85. (In Russ.)

van der Heijden H. (1997) Political opportunity structure and the institutionalisation of the environmental movement. Environmental Politics. Vol. 6. No. 4: 25–50.

Henry L.A. (2010) Red to Green: Environmental Activism in Post-­Soviet Russia. Cornell University Press.

Kaminskaya T.L., Pomiguev I.A., Nazarova N.A. (2019) Digital environmental activism as an instrument of influence on government decisions. Monitoring obschestvennogo mneniya: Ekonomicheskiye i sotsial’nyye peremeny [Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes]. No. 5: 382–407. (In Russ.)

Khalii I.A. (2007) Environmental social movement and power: forms of interactions. Polis. Politicheskiye issledovaniya [Polis. Political Studies]. No. 4: 130–139. (In Russ.)

Kitschelt H.P. (1986) Political Opportunity Structures and Political Protest: Anti-Nuclear Movements in Four Democracies. British Journal of Political Science. Vol. 16. No. 1: 57–85.

Kuzmina Y. (2022) “The Defenders of Shiyes”: traditionalism as a mobilisation resource in a Russian protest camp. East European Politics. Vol. 39. No. 2: 260–280.

Lubell M. (2002) Environmental Activism as Collective Action. Environment and Behavior. Vol. 34. No. 4: 431–454.

Marquart-Pyatt S.T. (2012) Explaining Environmental Activism Across Countries. Society & Natural Resources.Vol. 25. No. 7: 683–699.

Matveeva E.V. (2010) Ecological movement in Russia: stages of formation and development. Vestnik Permskogo un-ta [Bulletin of Perm University]. No. 3: 31–39. (In Russ.)

McAdam D., Boudet H. (2012) Putting Social Movements in their Place: Explaining Opposition to Energy Projects in the United States, 2000–2005. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

McCarthy J.D., Zald M.N. (1977) Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial Theory. American Journal of Sociology. Vol. 82. No. 6: 1212–1241.

Mihaylov N.L., Perkins D.D. (2015) Local environmental grassroots activism: contributions from environmental psychology, sociology and politics. Behavioral Sciences. Vol. 5. No. 1: 121–153.

Olson M. (1971) The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups, With a New Preface and Appendix. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Shubin A. (1992) Ecological movement in the USSR and the seceding countries. In: Ecological organizations of the ex-­USSR territory. A handbook. Ed. by E.N. Kofanova, N.I. Krotov. Moscow: RAU-Press. (In Russ.)

Sundstrom L.M., Henry L.A., Sperling V. (2022) The Evolution of Civic Activism in Contemporary Russia. East European Politics and Societies. Vol. 36. No. 4: 1377–1399.

Tilly C., Tarrow S. (2015) Contentious Politics. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. 2nd ed. Tsepilova O., Golbraih V. (2020) Environmental activism: mobilizing resources from “garbage” protests in Russia in 2018–2020. Zhurnal sotsiologii i sotsialnoy antropologii [The Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology]. Vol. 23, No. 4: 136–162. (in Russ).

Tulaeva S., Snarski Y. (2022) Green nationalism in a resource-based state: environmental agenda and national identity in Russian regions. Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research. Vol. 14. No. 3: 4–33. (In Russ.)

Turovets M.V. (2014) Protest as a rational action. Politicheskaya nauka [Political Science]. No. 4: 236–252. (In Russ.)

Tysiachniouk M.S. et al. (2023) Liberal spaces in an illiberal regime: environmental NGOs, state sovereignty and the struggle for nature. Territory, Politics, Governance. Vol. 0. No. 0: 1–20.

Yanitsky O. (1999) The Environmental Movement in a Hostile Context: The Case of Russia. International Sociology. Vol. 14. No. 2: 157–172.

Yanitsky O.N. (2007) Actors and resources of socio-ecological modernization. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya [Sociological Studies]. No. 8: 139–145. (In Russ.)

Yanitsky O.N. (2012) Mass mobilization: problems of theory. Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya [Sociological research]. No. 6: 3–12. (In Russ.)

Content No 2, 2024