Mapping Support for a Revolution: Evidence from Ukraine

IF 1.8 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
O. Nikolayenko
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Using a unique and previously untapped dataset of telegrams sent to student hunger strikers in Soviet Ukraine, this article examines spatial dispersion of civil resistance in a repressive political regime. The study argues that national identity, compared to socioeconomic grievances, explains better the level of opposition in a multiethnic, authoritarian state. The analysis demonstrates that support for the student hunger strike, also known as the Granite Revolution, was higher in areas with a larger proportion of Ukrainian-language speakers. Additionally, the rate of telegram-sending was significantly higher in areas with a more robust presence of the reform-oriented social movement Rukh. Meanwhile, socioeconomic grievances exerted a weaker impact on the rate of telegraphing support for the pro-democracy student movement. Moreover, contrary to classic modernization theory, opposition to the communist regime is found to be lower in areas with a higher level of urbanization. The profile of senders, as well as the content of telegrams, also suggests that identity-based grievances prevailed among supporters of the Granite Revolution. The study makes an empirical contribution to contentious politics literature by exploring patterns of civil resistance and political communication in the era preceding the rise of social media.
绘制支持革命的地图:来自乌克兰的证据
摘要:本文使用一个独特的和以前未开发的电报数据集,这些电报发送给苏联乌克兰的绝食学生,研究了镇压政治政权中公民抵抗的空间分散。该研究认为,与社会经济不满相比,国家认同更能解释一个多民族专制国家的反对程度。分析表明,在乌克兰语人口比例较大的地区,对学生绝食抗议(也被称为“花岗岩革命”)的支持度更高。此外,在以改革为导向的社会运动Rukh较为活跃的地区,电报发送率明显较高。与此同时,社会经济上的不满情绪对支持民主学生运动的电传率的影响较弱。此外,与经典的现代化理论相反,在城市化水平较高的地区,对共产主义政权的反对程度较低。发信人的简介以及电报的内容也表明,花岗岩革命的支持者普遍存在基于身份的不满。本研究通过探索社交媒体兴起前的公民抵抗和政治传播模式,为有争议的政治文献做出了实证贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
21
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