Preview

Humanities and Social Sciences. Bulletin of the Financial University

Advanced search

Information Flows Concerning Human Rights Protection in the Digital Representation Structure of Russians’ Civic Engagement in 2020: Results of Social Media Analysis

https://doi.org/10.26794/2226-7867-2021-11-2-102-110

Abstract

In the article, the author analysed the structural and content characteristics of the information flow, reflecting the discussion of the problems of protecting the individual’s rights in Russia as a type of civic activity of Russian Internet users. As a result of particular software use, the author accumulated a relevant array of social media document and the dynamics, the modality of the flow, its distribution across various social media, the gender and interpreted age composition of the human rights information audience flow. The author concluded that a sufficiently high potential for protest mobilization of this type of digital stream triggers top-starters of human rights discourse in social media to form non-constructive civic attitudes of Russians. Signs of a significant influence of the human rights stream, first of all, among the younger generation are shown. The author identified methods of using the most resonant events in Russian society’s socio-political life by online network opposition leaders to form unconventional Russians’ attitudes by placing these events in the context of a violation of individual rights. It predetermines a shift in meanings and meanings in the sphere of perception by Russian internet users of the ratio of rights and obligations citizens in the Russian Federation. The necessity of monitoring social and media streams representing the human rights theme in the structure of all streams reflecting the digital civic activity of Russian users is substantiated, the importance of accompanying these streams from the standpoint of creating alternative discourses aimed at overcoming the problem of undermining trust in existing government institutions and contributing to the formation of a culture of constructive civic activity of Russians in digital and offline environments.

About the Author

A.   Yu. Dombrovskaya 
Financial University; Moscow Pedagogical State University
Russian Federation

 Anna Yu. Dombrovskaya — Dr. Sci. (Sociology), Professor, Department of Political Science; Associate Professor, Department for Social and Political Research and Technologies, Institute for History and Politics

Moscow 



References

1. Dombrovskaya A. Yu. Civic activism of youth in modern Russia: features of manifestation in online and offline environments. Vlast. 2020;(2):51–58. (In Russ.).

2. Barash R.E., Petukhov V.V., Petukhov R.V. Information and communication factors in the formation of new practices of civic activism. Sotsiologicheskaya nauka i sotsial’naya praktika. 2015;4(12):99–125. (In Russ.).

3. Granovetter M.S. The strength of weak ties: a network theory revisited. Sociological Theory. 1983;(1):201–233.

4. Akhremenko A.S., Stukal D.K., Petrov A.P. Web or text? Drivers of Protest Spread on Social Media: Theory and Data Analysis. Polis. 2020;(2):73–91. (In Russ.).

5. Sibirev V.A., Golovin N.A., Klebanov A.A. Network communities in the struggle over the decision to transfer St. Isaac’s Cathedral to the Russian Orthodox Church (January-June 2017). Monitoring obshchestvennogo mneniya: ekonomicheskiye i sotsial’nyye peremeny. 2018;(1):296–317. (In Russ.).

6. Balashov A.N., Bochanov M.A. Internet technologies as a factor in the development of political activity of trends and contradictions. PolitBook. 2017;(2):22–34. (In Russ.).

7. Bronnikov I.A. Political practices of online civic activism in Russia: new platforms and technologies. PolitBook. 2019;(2):6–24. (In Russ.).

8. Brodovskaya E.V., Huang T. Digital generation: civil mobilization and political protest of Russian youth. Monitoring obshchestvennogo mneniya: ekonomicheskiye i sotsial’nyye peremeny. 2019;(5):3–18. (In Russ.).

9. Pyrma R.V. Theoretical aspects of the study of political preferences of Russian youth. Vlast. 2020;(4):157–162. (In Russ.).

10. James M. Jasper and Jan Willem Duyvendak, eds. Players and Arenas: The Interactive Dynamics of Protest. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press; 2015. 322 p.

11. Ushkin S.G. Towards a Better Society, or Why Do People Become Activists? Monitoring obshchestvennogo mneniya: ekonomicheskiye i sotsial’nyye peremeny. 2016;(3):33–47. (In Russ.).

12. Sedova N.N. Civil activism in modern Russia. Sotsiologicheskiy zhurnal. 2014;(2):48–71. (In Russ.).

13. Nikovskaya L.I., Skalaban I.A. Civic participation: features of discourse and trends of real development. Polis. 2017;(6):43–60. (In Russ.).

14. Brodovskaya E.V., Dombrovskaya A. Yu., Karzubov D.N. Digital communities of civil and political activists in Russia: integration, management, and mobilization potential. Vestnik Moskovskogo gosudarstvennogo oblastnogo universiteta (elektronnyy zhurnal). URL: www.evestnik-mgou.ru. (In Russ.).


Review

For citations:


Dombrovskaya  A.Yu. Information Flows Concerning Human Rights Protection in the Digital Representation Structure of Russians’ Civic Engagement in 2020: Results of Social Media Analysis. Humanities and Social Sciences. Bulletin of the Financial University. 2021;11(2):102-110. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26794/2226-7867-2021-11-2-102-110

Views: 478


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2226-7867 (Print)
ISSN 2619-1482 (Online)