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Looking beyond the economy: Pussy Riot and the Kremlin's voting coalition
Authors:Regina Smyth  Irina Soboleva
Affiliation:1. Department of Political Science, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA;2. Department of Political Science, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia
Abstract:The arrest of the protest punk band Pussy Riot (PR) in March 2012 and the subsequent prosecution of three band members pose a significant puzzle for political science. Although PR's performances presented a coherent alternative to the Putin regime's image of Russian reality, it was unlikely that the discordant music and crude lyrics of their art protest would inspire Russian society to take to the streets. Yet, the regime mounted a very visible prosecution against the three young women. We argue that the trial marked a shift in the Kremlin's strategy to shape state–society relations. In the face of declining economic conditions and social unrest, the PR trial encapsulated the Kremlin's renewed focus on three related mechanisms to insure social support: coercion, alliance building, and symbolic politics. The PR trial afforded the Kremlin an important opportunity to simultaneously redefine its loyal constituency, secure the Church–state relationship, and stigmatize the opposition.
Keywords:Pussy Riot  Russia  state–society relations  coercion  alliance building  symbolic politics  regime stability  politicized justice
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