Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 12 – A new study
by three sociologists at the Higher School of Economics in St. Petersburg says
that unless the aggressive actions of a minority of young Russians in any
social group are condemned, they are likely to spread and be accepted as the
new normal by others.
The three, Valeriya Ivanoyushina,
Daniil Aleksandrova and Vera Titkova, do not make the obvious extrapolation of
their argument to adults and to the leaders of countries; but it is
inescapable. Unless aggression by such people is condemned, it too will rapidly
come to be viewed as the new normal and spread to others.
The study, at isras.ru/index.php?page_id=2382&jn=socjournal&j=1&y=2016&n=1 and summarized today at iq.hse.ru/news/198378801.html, is nonetheless interesting in its own right. It found that
in classes where young people and teachers condemn aggression, there is less of
it because few believe it will solve their problems.
But
in those places where it is not condemned and condemned on a regular basis, the
aggressive behavior of minorities increasingly comes to be viewed as something
entirely normal rather than exceptional and is picked up by others who read the
failure of leaders to condemn aggression as a signal that it is appropriate
behavior.
“It
is no secret,” the authors say, “that the most cynical youths not infrequently
turn out to be the leaders of the collective,” especially in places infected by
hostility and rudeness. In such groups, many see being friends with the
aggressive as “profitable” to themselves because it makes it less likely they
will be attacked by others.
The
popularity of aggressors, the authors say, is “an extremely dangerous thing”
because “it leads to the spread of cruelty” and to bullying by those who see it
as the new norm. And as a result, many
young Russians see avoiding aggression as a violation of the rules of the game
as established by the more aggressive.
The
share of those in Russian youth groups who are aggressive is roughly the same
as in other countries, but there are some differences. In Russia, young people
who are aggressive are more likely to be popular than is the case in many other
places, the result presumably of the failure of teachers and others to denounce
cruelty and thus allow it to be viewed positively.
No comments:
Post a Comment