Posted 6 августа 2020, 07:08
Published 6 августа 2020, 07:08
Modified 24 декабря 2022, 22:37
Updated 24 декабря 2022, 22:37
Not so long ago, sociologist Aleksey Zakharov published a very informative comparative review of the nationwide recognition of the Khabarovsk protest based on the results of polls by the Levada Center:
“The numbers are very encouraging. Most Russians are in the know and sympathize with the protesters:
Do you know about the protests taking place in the Khabarovsk Territory in connection with the arrest of the Governor Sergei Furgal?
Keep a close eye on how events unfold - 26%
Heard something about it - 57%
The first time you hear about it - 16%
How do you feel about the people who came out to these protests?
Rather positive - 45%
Neutral, indifferent - Khabarovsk 23%
Rather negative, negative - 17%
Difficult to answer - 11%
For comparison, last summer's protests in Moscow were less noticeable (16% followed closely, 47% heard something), and they were treated much worse (23% positive, 45% neutral, 25% negative [2]). The visibility of last year's events in Yekaterinburg, Ingushetia and Shies was even lower (41%, 74% and 65% of the respondents had not heard anything about them). Delegitimizing the Khabarovsk protest is a more difficult task for Putin, and it is not yet clear how he will cope..."
Another sociologist, Sergey Yerofeyev, explains what is actually happening in Khabarovsk in recent days in the conditions of an almost complete information blockade by the state media:
“Coverage of weekdays of the protest by independent sources: on Tuesday August 4, 2020, there were 7 streams from Khabarovsk, two hours long and longer, 4 of them with views ranging from 100 to 200 thousand in the first hours. This means, apart from the main performances on Saturdays, a significant increase in comparison with the previous days and weeks (especially since Alexey Romanov was arrested, and Dmitry Nizovtsev returned to Moscow). At the same time, as before, independent media and streams, with limited comments, do not provide a voluminous picture of what is happening, so that the audience can understand more clearly whether the protest is on the decline and what is the overall dynamics of the struggle that we are witnessing.
Of course, the Khabarovsk protest can be discussed “politologically”, when preference is given to a comparative analysis of the algorithms for suppressing such protests by the authorities, although in principle this is nothing new. Other commentators are busy with stories about the behavior of mainly representatives of the authorities, but by no means the public. It is more productive when such a discussion is conducted taking into account the successful experience of the public of Yekaterinburg and Shies, as well as the uniqueness of the Khabarovsk situation, since this is the only region of Russia that has recently tried to live for itself, without the excessive intervention of the Kremlin, and its residents at a critical moment immediately spoke with political demands. And yet, in the responses to the Khabarovsk events, there is a lot of fortune-telling in the thick of political science (even one of the 3.5 real political scientists in Russia, Grigory Golosov, groundlessly argued that the protest had original organizers), while we are faced with a primarily cultural and sociological case.
The most important help for obtaining a voluminous cultural picture of political struggle - and this, from the point of view of science, is a normal political struggle - and identifying its dynamics could be (1) polls of the Khabarovsk residents (it seems that the local headquarters of Navalny is already engaged in this), as well as (2 ) a simple sociological observation of what is happening and its description with the possibility of categorizing the elements of public action. The second is what, given structural conditions, such as a certain amount of freedom and professional competition, journalists should do. However, even the Rain present in Khabarovsk does not do this, and not so much because it does not have professionals at its disposal - such an exercise that seeds for as many as one and a half of the competent journalists available to the channel - simply in the absence of the mentioned structural conditions, he cannot afford to be completely honest and comprehensive analysis. Other federal media outlets are not involved, even such as The New Times, Novaya Gazeta, Radio Liberty and Mediazona.
At the same time, almost anyone who carefully watches various streams from Khabarovsk is able to notice what can serve as critical material for cultural and sociological analysis based on the available panoramas and scenes. In this regard, I have already posted on Facebook small sketches about the dynamics of the behavior of the Khabarovsk public and, in particular, the expansion of its repertoire of demands and aesthetic framing of political action. Since no one has really dealt with this yet, I will add a little about what the 25th day brought.
This is just a quick sketch. I certainly could have missed something important among the many online panoramas and street scenes as sociological raw materials. Something, perhaps, is a repetition or does not have the frontal meaning that I tend to attach to it. This sketch is also far from a well-thought-out systematic categorization of public action, but maybe someone will already do it? In the meantime, my main, uncomplicated, assumption boils down to the effectiveness of the NEMK principle, when the public becomes more angry, but, at the same time, much more understanding..."