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Securitising Russia

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The book demonstrates how Vladimir Putin has wrestled with terrorism, immigration, media freedom, religious pluralism and economic globalism in response to twenty-first-century security concerns.
  • 30 October 2006
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Securitising Russia shows the impact of twenty-first-century security concerns on the way Russia is ruled. It demonstrates how President Putin has wrestled with terrorism, immigration, media freedom, religious pluralism, and economic globalism, and argues that fears of a return to old-style authoritarianism oversimplify the complex context of contemporary Russia.

The book focuses on the internal security issues common to many states in the early twenty-first-century, and places them in the particular context of Russia. Detailed analysis of the place of security in Russia’s political discourse and policy-making reveals nuances often missing from overarching assessments of Russia today. To characterise the Putin regime as the ‘KGB-resurgent’ is to miss vital continuities, contexts, and on-going political conflicts which make up the contemporary Russian scene.

Securitising Russia draws together current debates about whether Russia is a ‘normal’ country developing its own democratic and market structures, or a nascent authoritarian regime returning to the past.

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Price: $120.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 30 October 2006
ISBN: 9780719072246
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Freedom, International relations, HISTORY / Russia & the Former Soviet Union, Political control and freedoms, History of other geographical groupings and regions
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Edwin Bacon is Reader in Comparative Politics at Birkbeck College, the University of London. Bettina Renz is an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow in the European Research Institute at the University of Birmingham. Julian Cooper is Professor of Russian Economic Studies in the European Research Institute at the University of Birmingham

Introduction
1. Approaches to contemporary Russia
2. The security forces
3. The Chechen conflict
4. The media
5. Civil society
6. Migration
7. The economy
8. Conclusion
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