Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 23 – The increasing
autonomy of the state which can deal with society only by the use of force and
the increasing self-organization of society by means of the Internet mean, Ella
Paneyakh says, that the current situation “can get better or it can get worse
but something must happen.”
Speaking at the Sakharov Center, the
Higher School of Economics scholar argues that “the transformational processes now
taking place in Russian society are no less powerful and even more fundamental
than those in the immediate post-Soviet period” (mbk-news.appspot.com/sences/pochemu-v-rossii-lekciya-elly-paneyax/).
On the one hand, the state is
increasingly autonomous from the population, lacks the ties with society most governments
have and is thus compelled to use force to try to control the situation. And on
the other, society is increasingly organizing itself through experience with
virtual communities online.
At the same time, Paneyakh continues,
“society is not in opposition to the state in the full sense of this word”
because “every third Russian works one way or another for the state.” But “even
an individual who works for the state but is not a senior official becomes a
citizen when he goes into the streets.”
“The Russian state is surprisingly
autonomous from its society,” she says; and that means that “it cannot deal
with its society otherwise than with the help of force.” It has tried to create various mechanisms, including
political parties, to make that less necessary but they have proven
ineffectual.
Much of the reason for this lies in
the Soviet background of those in the state. But if the state has remained
similar to what the Soviet one was, the society has changed. It has lost those
controlling social patterns that dominated social life and is now, after a
generation, acquiring new ones through its experience with online communities.
“Post-Soviet people have learned
almost from nothing to organize links among themselves,” and in this process,
the Internet has played a key role. In online communities, people work out
rules for coexistence and cooperation with others, and those habits transfer
into their daily lives.
Indeed, she suggests, “the appearance
of blogs and social networks have made the Internet a new channel of
socialization. This channel not only helps people to satisfy their requirements
in communion but also to develop the habits of social communication which they
then apply in the sphere of civic interrelationships.”
And that development in turn is producing
another one: people who have learned these skills and habits do not see why
they should not be extended to political life, something that puts them at odds
with the autonomous state. At present, of course, not all Russians have become
part of this new Internet-driven world and thus there is “a digital divide” in
Russian society.
But enough have that the state has
been compelled to take notice. It doesn’t like being criticized as it
invariably is online and so it turns to the use of force to try to prevent this
from happening. But that is sustainable
only for so long, and Paneyakh suggests that the situation is rapidly reaching
a critical point.
The relations between state and society
in Russia, she says, can get worse or they can get better; but they are not
going to remain where they are for very much longer.
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