Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 29 – Surveys conducted by the Public Opinion Foundation find that 82
percent of Russian residents say they are ethnic Russians, while five percent
say they are Tatars, and two percent Ukrainians; but the most interesting findings
concern Russian attitudes toward nationality, special rights for the majority
nation, and restrictions on immigration.
On
those issues, the POF polls report significant changes since 2013. Perhaps most important, the number of residents
of the Russian Federation who say they are always aware of their national
identities has gone up from 60 percent five years ago to 80 percent now, likely
a response to propaganda about Russia’s war in Ukraine and standoff with the
West (actualcomment.ru/rossiyane-stali-bolee-tolerantnymi-1812291056.html).
But if Russians have become more
ethnically conscious over this period, the foundation stresses, they have less supportive
of discrimination on ethnic lines. The share saying ethnic Russians should have
special rights has fallen from 31 to 23 percent, those saying everyone should
have equal rights rose from 63 to 71 percent, and those saying Russia benefits
from multi-nationality was up from 44 to 50 percent.
Those favoring restrictions on
immigration from some countries meanwhile fell from 63 to 45 percent, while
those opposing any restrictions on immigration rose from 27 to 43 percent.
Russian media are playing these
results up as an indication that Russians are becoming more tolerant. That is
possible, but it is also possible that these results as so often the case
reflect Russians’ saying what the authorities want them to say – and right now
promoting the idea that Russians are ethnically tolerant fits with the Kremlin’s
program.
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