Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Zhelnina A., Tykanova E. (2019) Formal’nyye i neformal’nyye grazhdanskiye infrastruktury: sovremennyye issledovaniya gorodskogo lokal’nogo aktivizma v Rossii [Formal and informal civic infrastructure: contemporary studies of urban local activism in Russia]. Zhurnal sotsiologii i sotsialnoy antropologii [The Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology], 22(1): 162–192 (in Russian). https: ...



Zhelnina A., Tykanova E. (2019) Formal’nyye i neformal’nyye grazhdanskiye infrastruktury: sovremennyye issledovaniya gorodskogo lokal’nogo aktivizma v Rossii [Formal and informal civic infrastructure: contemporary studies of urban local activism in Russia]. Zhurnal sotsiologii i sotsialnoy antropologii [The Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology], 22(1): 162–192 (in Russian). https://doi.org/10.31119/jssa.2019.22.1.8
ISSN 1029-8053
DOI 10.31119/jssa.2019.22.1.8
ÐÈÍÖ: https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=39283032

Posted on site: 09.09.19

Òåêñò ñòàòüè íà ñàéòå æóðíàëà URL: http://jourssa.ru/sites/all/files/volumes/2019_1/Zhelnina_Tykanova_2019_1.pdf (äàòà îáðàùåíèÿ 09.09.2019)


Abstract

This paper explores the academic discussion about local urban activism in contemporary Russia and aims at revealing the specificity of Russian urban activism. The authors move away from the traditional framework of describing Russian urban processes as “post-Soviet” or “post-socialist,” and position Russian studies of local activism in a broader context of similar research conducted in cities of the Global North and the Global South. Building on the international theoretical developments, the authors suggest the concept of “civic infrastructures” as a promising tool for the analysis of local urban activism, distinguishing between “formal” and “informal” civic infrastructures. Formal civic infrastructures include legally regulated forms of civic participation, such as voting, participation in voluntary associations, municipal self-governance, organizing and cooperation of homeowners, participatory budgeting. Informal civic infrastructures include informal associations, friendship networks, as well as worldviews and ideas that are focused on the creation and maintenance of a common good. The authors conclude that the dramatic contestation of urban spaces in contemporary Russia increases and informal civic infrastructures become more prominent. Scholarly evidence confirms the development of civic worldviews, subjectivities, and politicization of urbanites ready and willing to get involved in the process of decision making regarding their cities’ fate. Formal civic infrastructures, however, do not provide them with adequate tools for such participation. Building on the “strategic interaction perspective,” the authors suggest a theoretical model for local activism studies in Russia which includes tools, sensitive to the interactions of players involved in the urban development processes. They conclude that the integration of formal and informal civic infrastructures is necessary for a healthy civil society and efficient resolution of urban conflicts.