Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 19 – Russian
attitudes on the proper relationship between the state and the individual have
undergone a fundamental shift over the last two decades, Natalya Tikhonova
says; and “for the first time in the history of the country, the interests of
the state have ceased to dominate the interests of the individual or of social
groups.”
This shift is likely to give rise to
a new model of state and society relations, the sociologist at the Higher
School of Economics says; but it will not be one that resemble Western models
of the kind promoted by many human rights activists in Russia today. Instead,
it will be a uniquely Russian kind.
Tikhonova reports
her research in an article, “The Relationship of the Interests of the State and
of Human Rights in the Eyes of Russians: An Empirical Analysis” (in Russian), Polis, no. 5 (2018): 134-139 at publications.hse.ru/articles/224695560
that has now been summarized at iq.hse.ru/news/229629574.html.
The
relationship between human rights and the state shifted for Russians “not so
long ago.” Until about 2010, for them, it corresponded to “the norms of
traditional society: the state was the instrument for the realization for the
interests of the people, the interests of the people were higher than those of the
individual, and citizens” owed loyalty and submission to the state.
But
a competing model emerged in the 1990s and gathered steam about a decade ago
with society increasingly divided into two groups as far as this issue was
concerned, Tikhonova says. In the first were the traditionalists, with 60
percent of the population giving the state priority over the individual and 51
percent ready to agree to limits on individual freedoms.
In
the second was “an alternative.” Those
in this group said that “the individual did not have the right to expect kindness
from the powers that be but can struggle for his own interests in spite of the
opinion of the majority.” Seventy-seven percent of this group agreed with that,
and 55 percent allowed for strikes, meetings and so on as a means.
This second group and its norms did not predominate,
Tikhonova says, “but the number of those holding them in comparison with the 1990s
had significantly increased, and the share of supporters of ‘an all-powerful’
state had contracted.” Then in the mid-2010s, she says, this shift accelerated
with neither position being predominant.
Instead, about 20 percent held the two
extreme positions, with some 60 percent in between. Among the young the shift toward the
individual over the state was greatest; among the elderly, the least, as one
would expect, Tikhonova says. But
because the latter are passing from the scene and the former becoming more
important, the overall shift in the future is clear.
It turns out,
however, that this set of attitudes among the young does not give primacy to
political rights and democratic values but rather to other values: “For them
economic freedoms are more important,” they have little interest in politics,
they view the opposition as it currently operates with suspicion, and “they are
not oriented toward the West.”
“All this says,” Tikhonova
concludes, “that the Western variant of the modernization of society will not
be massively supported in Russia and our country will need to search for its
own path. What it will be is an open question; but in any case, in the new model
of the interrelationship of the state and the individual will be required a
significant expansion of the legitimate forms of struggle of individuals and
social groups for their rights.”
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