Book contents
- Ruling by Other Means
- Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics
- Ruling by Other Means
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 State-Mobilized Movements: A Research Agenda
- 2 Manufactured Ambiguity
- 3 Suppressing Students in the People’s Republic of China
- 4 State-Mobilized Community Development
- 5 Enforcement Networks and Racial Contention in Civil Rights–Era Mississippi
- 6 Social Sources of Counterrevolution
- 7 Occupy Youth!
- 8 State-Mobilized Movements after Annexation of Crimea
- 9 Mirroring Opposition Threats
- 10 Mobilizing against Change
- 11 The Dynamics of State-Mobilized Movements
- 12 State-Mobilized Campaign and the Prodemocracy Movement in Hong Kong, 2013–2015
- 13 The Resurrection of Lei Feng
- Index
- Books in the Series (continued from p.iii)
- References
8 - State-Mobilized Movements after Annexation of Crimea
The Construction of Novorossiya
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2020
- Ruling by Other Means
- Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics
- Ruling by Other Means
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 State-Mobilized Movements: A Research Agenda
- 2 Manufactured Ambiguity
- 3 Suppressing Students in the People’s Republic of China
- 4 State-Mobilized Community Development
- 5 Enforcement Networks and Racial Contention in Civil Rights–Era Mississippi
- 6 Social Sources of Counterrevolution
- 7 Occupy Youth!
- 8 State-Mobilized Movements after Annexation of Crimea
- 9 Mirroring Opposition Threats
- 10 Mobilizing against Change
- 11 The Dynamics of State-Mobilized Movements
- 12 State-Mobilized Campaign and the Prodemocracy Movement in Hong Kong, 2013–2015
- 13 The Resurrection of Lei Feng
- Index
- Books in the Series (continued from p.iii)
- References
Summary
During and after the Crimean annexation in March 2014, Russia witnessed a huge increase in support for President Vladimir Putin (Hale, 2018). More importantly for events on the ground, however, this rally was not limited to changes in political approval: it extended to the mobilization of large numbers of volunteers, donors and sympathizers in support of military action outside the country’s borders. Both online and offline, a surge of activism was unleashed to strengthen, militarily and ideologically, the claim that Crimea and eastern Ukraine were somehow a natural part of Russia that had been accidentally and wrongly alienated by the idiosyncrasies of the collapse of the USSR (Matveeva, 2018). Two names that came to be adopted by the movement, “Russian Spring”/“Novorossiya,” reflect the intertwined ideas of a revival of ethnic Russian consciousness, the return of a previously dormant Russia back onto the international stage, and the tsarist-era basis of the Russian claim to much of what is today southern and eastern Ukraine.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ruling by Other MeansState-Mobilized Movements, pp. 193 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
References
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