Critical infrastructure protection and Russia's hybrid regime |
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Authors: | Katri Pynnöniemi Irina Busygina |
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Affiliation: | 1. The EU's Eastern Neighbourhood and Russia Research Programme, The Finnish Institute of International Affairs, Kruunuvuorenkatu 4, Helsinki 00161, Finland katri.pynnoniemi@fiia.fi;3. Department of Comparative Politics, Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), 76 Prospekt Vernadskogo, Moscow 119454, Russia |
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Abstract: | The Russian policy on critical infrastructure protection was outlined in the early 2000s and has been consolidated in recent years as a part of the national security strategy. This policy is evolving against a background composed of an uneasy combination of factors: the degeneration of infrastructures critical for the country's economic and social development, and the de-legitimization of political institutions responsible for protecting ‘population’ and ‘territory’. The recent major catastrophes in Russia, the notorious forest fires in 2010 in particular, have become examples of political events that offer a point of reference for the current regime's failure to uphold its promises of ‘order and stability’. |
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Keywords: | Russia critical infrastructure protection national security political regime |
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