POLICING PROTEST AND POLICE ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURE IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA

POLICING PROTEST AND POLICE ENVIRONMENTAL CULTURE IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA

Exploring policing protest often becomes a part of research on political regime openness and law enforcement. The classical study of policing protest provides analytical framework and typologies for defining relations between political openness and the use of coercion policing. The main goal of my current research is to move from in-depth analysis of Russian political regime to explore Russian police environmental culture and professional knowledge formation. Conclusions are based on bibliometric analysis of the “extremism” research field to define influence of institutional science on police knowledge formation. Discourse analysis explores Russian police networked community for defining public issue agenda and main intentions towards actors of contentious politics. On the other hand, research notifies stereotypes on protest actions and activists. Initial results of research show narrow institutional science effect on the process of corporate knowledge formation. Classic distinction between «good» and «bad» demonstrators in Russia is largely based on the type of public claims social/political , mobilization and contentious repertoire

___

  • Aguillo, I.F., 2011. Is Google Scholar useful for bibliometrics? A webometric analysis. Scientometrics, 91, pp.343–351.
  • Ahmedova, M., 2013. Vo chto verit OMON? Russkiy reporter, 15 August. [online] Available at: [Accessed 12 February 2017].
  • della Porta, D., 1995. Social movements, political violence, and the state: A comparative analysis of Italy and Germany. Cambridge University Press.
  • della Porta, d., & Reıter, H., 1998. The policing of protest in western democracies: introduction. In: della Porta D. and Reiter H. eds., 1998. Policing protest: The control of mass demonstrations in Western democracies. Vol. 6. University of Minnesota Press. pp.1-34.
  • della Porta, D., & Fillieule, O., 2004. Policing social protest. In: Snow, D. A., Soule, S. A., & Kriesi, H. Eds., 2008. The Blackwell companion to social movements. John Wiley & Sons. pp.217-241.
  • DiMaggio P., Powell W., 1983. The iron cage revisited: institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American Sociological Review, 48(2), pp.147–160.
  • Fillieule, O., & Jobard, F., 1997. The Maintenance of order in France. Towards a model of protest policing.
  • In: della Porta D. and Reiter H. eds., 1997. Policing protest: The control of mass demonstrations in Western democracies. Vol. 6. University of Minnesota Press. pp.70-90.
  • Foucault, M., 1980. Power/knowledge: Selected interviews and other writings, 1972-1977. Pantheon.
  • Gel’man, V., 2015. Politika strakha: kak rossiyskiy rezhim protivostoit svoim protivnikam. Kontrapunkt, 1, pp.1-11.
  • Gorbunova, Y., & Baranov, K., 2013. Laws of attrition: Crackdown on Russia's civil society after Putin's return to the presidency. Human Rights Watch.
  • Gulova, U., 2010. Kosmonavt s dubinkoy. Russkiy reporter, 10 February. [online] Available at: [Accessed 12 February 2017].
  • Kordonski, S.G., 2008. Soslovnaya struktura postsovetskoy Rossii (chast' II). Mir Rossii. Sotsiologiya. Etnologiya, 17(4), pp.3-36.
  • McGarity, T.O., & Wagner, W.E., 2008. Bending science: How special interests corrupt public health research. Harvard University Press.
  • McPhail, C., Schweingruber, D., & McCarthy, J., 1998. Policing protest in the United States: 1960-1995.
  • In: della Porta D. and Reiter H. eds., 1998. Policing protest: The control of mass demonstrations in Western democracies. Vol. 6. University of Minnesota Press. pp.49-69.
  • Robertson, G.B., 2009. Managing society: protest, civil society, and regime in Putin's Russia. Slavic Review, 68(3), pp.528-547.