Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 24 – Sociologists like
Oleg Zhuravlyev of Tyumen University say that there has been a major shift in the
composition and attitudes of Russian protesters over the last decade. Compared
to 2011-2013, protesters are significantly younger, from poorer groups, and
further to the left.
Those taking part in the earlier
demonstrations against election fraud, he and other sociologists say, were middle
class, averaging between 25 and 40 years of age, and with higher educations.
Those doing so now are much poorer, much younger, and with as yet no higher
education (russian.eurasianet.org/россия-протестное-движение-молодеет-левеет-и-беднеет).
Many who took part in the earlier
protests had something to lose and thus were profoundly affected by repressions
against them. Those, far more that the “Crimea is ours” euphoria reduced their
ranks, Zhuravlyev says. Indeed, many of those who did take part regardless of
their views on Crimea felt their protests were separate from that issue.
There were significant numbers of
young people in the 2011-2013 protests, but they took their lead from the
adults. Now that has changed, the sociologists say. Most of them now act
without considering the positions of the older generation, taking part in or
even organizing protests on their own.
They have less to lose and are more influenced
by the actions of other young people in much the same way as has been true in
other countries. On the one hand, if protests are happening, they want to be
part of that; and on the other, they will participate even if they are not all
that enamored of the leaders.
As some young people put it, in
Zhuravlyev’s words, “we do not like Navalny personally but today this is the
only mass opposition protest going.”
This politicization of young people,
the sociologist continues, is in no way surprising. In contrast to their
parents, they grew up at a time when protests were part of their lives. “Today’s
youths,” he says, “are growing up in a politicized milieu, unlike their older
brothers and sisters” and they feel that they can protest with much greater
impunity.
Sociological studies also show that
the composition of protesters is changing not only as far as age structure is
concerned but also by their social status. If the 2011-2013 demonstrations were
dominated by the middle class, more recent ones have sprung from those lower
down the social pyramid.
As ever more poor people have come
to take part, Zhuravlyev says, there has been a marked shift in protests away
from middle class issues like ecology to left-wing causes like social equality
and benefits. The failure of the leaders
of the pension protests to tap into this kept those demonstrations from
becoming as massive as they might have been.
As protesters have become younger,
poorer, and further left, Zhuravlyev says, they have also become more dependent
on leaders to organize the demonstrations even if those taking part do not
always support such people. And that gives the new protests a more populist and
less elitist character than the actions of 2011-2013.
It is possible this pattern will
change if the middle class reenters the protest movement, the sociologist says;
but at present, those taking to the streets are sufficiently different from
those who did so earlier as a result represent a different and potentially
greater challenge to the regime, one more class-based and more radical even if
superficially less threatening to the powers.
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