In today's hyperconnected world, states are confronted with the global challenge of responding to potentially disruptive online communications, such as terrorist propaganda and fake news. Formulating effective internet regulation to address these threats carries the risk of infringing upon media freedom and constitutional rights. In the case of Russia, ostensibly sound legitimations have been instrumentalised to bring about a dramatic decline in internet freedom. Controlling public opinion may well be decisive for Russia's "success" in expanding its system of internet controls without arousing popular resistance. Scholarship thus far, however, has neglected to critically examine how the Russian government legitimates and cultivates popular ...
The notion of individual privacy has always been a political one throughout Russia’s Soviet and post...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
Amid the intensification of state control over the digital domain in Russia, what types of online ac...
How are extensive internet control, surveillance and restricted online anonymity reconceptualized in...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This chapter hopes to throw some light onto the relationship of censorship, legality and technology ...
This article analyses recent developments in regulatory practices applied by the Russian government ...
When, in April 2018, the Russian Internet watchdog Roskomnadzor orders to block Telegram — the count...
The culture of mass communication in Russia has been challenged by the emergence of new communicatio...
This paper examines how Russian opposition activists negotiate online visibility—their own and that ...
In the aftermath of the 2016 U.S. election, researchers, policymakers and the general public are gra...
The purpose of this work is to provide an analysis of the contemporary state of the Russian internet...
Telegram messenger, created by an exiled Russian entrepreneur Pavel Durov, brands itself as a non-ma...
The Russian government’s crackdown on free speech online has seen social media users jailed and fine...
Is the cyber-utopian versus cyber-repression argument the most effective way to frame the political ...
The notion of individual privacy has always been a political one throughout Russia’s Soviet and post...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
Amid the intensification of state control over the digital domain in Russia, what types of online ac...
How are extensive internet control, surveillance and restricted online anonymity reconceptualized in...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This chapter hopes to throw some light onto the relationship of censorship, legality and technology ...
This article analyses recent developments in regulatory practices applied by the Russian government ...
When, in April 2018, the Russian Internet watchdog Roskomnadzor orders to block Telegram — the count...
The culture of mass communication in Russia has been challenged by the emergence of new communicatio...
This paper examines how Russian opposition activists negotiate online visibility—their own and that ...
In the aftermath of the 2016 U.S. election, researchers, policymakers and the general public are gra...
The purpose of this work is to provide an analysis of the contemporary state of the Russian internet...
Telegram messenger, created by an exiled Russian entrepreneur Pavel Durov, brands itself as a non-ma...
The Russian government’s crackdown on free speech online has seen social media users jailed and fine...
Is the cyber-utopian versus cyber-repression argument the most effective way to frame the political ...
The notion of individual privacy has always been a political one throughout Russia’s Soviet and post...
This article explores aspects, transformations, and dynamics of the ideological control of the inter...
Amid the intensification of state control over the digital domain in Russia, what types of online ac...