Digital Authoritarianism in the Making

Repression and Resistance on the Russian Internet

On the genesis of digital authoritarianism in the Russian Internet space, from peace to war.

How did the authoritarian dynamic that is currently plaguing the Russian internet (Runet) come to dominate a digital space that was initially free? Digital Authoritarianism in the Making reveals the policies regulating the Runet, resituating them within their historical context starting in the early 2010s and ending with the start of the full-scale war against Ukraine in February 2022. It offers a political sociology of the Russian digital space, including the variety of actors who have sought to occupy it: access providers, developers, journalists, activists, web professionals, and mobilized citizens.

Informed by five years of original fieldwork, the book highlights both repressive policies and online resistance, including lesser-known social and technical practices used to circumvent constraints.

While the Runet's shift toward authoritarianism is specific to Russia, this model is expanding to all the regions where Moscow is extending its influence. This book is a must-read for all those who pay attention to the coercive uses of the internet, in Russia and beyond.
Series Editor’s Introduction
Sandra Braman
Preface to the English-language Edition
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
1 Digital Sovereignty in Russia: Taking the Internet Clampdown to Court?
Valéry Kossov
2 Surveillance and Censorship of Internet Infrastructures: Markets, Regulation, and Black Boxes
Ksenia Ermoshina, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
3 Disciplining the Digital Public Space: the Yandex.News Aggregator
Françoise Daucé and Benjamin Loveluck
4 Digital Security Training: GAFAM/MAGMA, Data Protection and Encryption
Olga Bronnikova, Ksenia Ermoshina, Anna Zaytseva
5 Data Journalism: Investigating in a Censored Public Space
Françoise Daucé
6 Copyright and Online Books: Control Over Contents, Transgressions, and Spaces of Freedom
Bella Ostromooukhova
7 Mobilization and Dissent on Blogs and Social Media
Perrine Poupin
8 From Digital Control to Physical Repression: Searches, Prison, Exile, and War
Olga Bronnikova, Françoise Daucé, Ksenia Ermoshina, Benjamin Loveluck
Conclusion
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck, Francesca Musiani
Russian-to-English Transliteration Table
Glossary of Acronyms
Notes
Contributors
Index

About

On the genesis of digital authoritarianism in the Russian Internet space, from peace to war.

How did the authoritarian dynamic that is currently plaguing the Russian internet (Runet) come to dominate a digital space that was initially free? Digital Authoritarianism in the Making reveals the policies regulating the Runet, resituating them within their historical context starting in the early 2010s and ending with the start of the full-scale war against Ukraine in February 2022. It offers a political sociology of the Russian digital space, including the variety of actors who have sought to occupy it: access providers, developers, journalists, activists, web professionals, and mobilized citizens.

Informed by five years of original fieldwork, the book highlights both repressive policies and online resistance, including lesser-known social and technical practices used to circumvent constraints.

While the Runet's shift toward authoritarianism is specific to Russia, this model is expanding to all the regions where Moscow is extending its influence. This book is a must-read for all those who pay attention to the coercive uses of the internet, in Russia and beyond.

Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Introduction
Sandra Braman
Preface to the English-language Edition
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
1 Digital Sovereignty in Russia: Taking the Internet Clampdown to Court?
Valéry Kossov
2 Surveillance and Censorship of Internet Infrastructures: Markets, Regulation, and Black Boxes
Ksenia Ermoshina, Benjamin Loveluck and Francesca Musiani
3 Disciplining the Digital Public Space: the Yandex.News Aggregator
Françoise Daucé and Benjamin Loveluck
4 Digital Security Training: GAFAM/MAGMA, Data Protection and Encryption
Olga Bronnikova, Ksenia Ermoshina, Anna Zaytseva
5 Data Journalism: Investigating in a Censored Public Space
Françoise Daucé
6 Copyright and Online Books: Control Over Contents, Transgressions, and Spaces of Freedom
Bella Ostromooukhova
7 Mobilization and Dissent on Blogs and Social Media
Perrine Poupin
8 From Digital Control to Physical Repression: Searches, Prison, Exile, and War
Olga Bronnikova, Françoise Daucé, Ksenia Ermoshina, Benjamin Loveluck
Conclusion
Françoise Daucé, Benjamin Loveluck, Francesca Musiani
Russian-to-English Transliteration Table
Glossary of Acronyms
Notes
Contributors
Index
  • More Websites from
    Penguin Random House
  • Common Reads
  • Library Marketing