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Human Rights in Russia: Citizens and the State from Perestroika to Putin

Human Rights in Russia: Citizens and the State from Perestroika to Putin
Mary McAuley

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Description

Today Russia and human rights are both high on the international agenda. Since Putin returned to the presidency in 2012, domestic developments from the prosecution of Pussy Riot to the release of Khodorkovsky and Russia s global role, especially in relation to Ukraine, have captured the attention of the world. The role of human rights activism inside Russia is, therefore, coming under ever greater international scrutiny. Since 1991, when the Russian Federation became an independent state, hundreds of organisations have been created to champion human rights causes, with varying strategies, and successes. The response of the authorities has ranged from being supportive, or indifferent, to openly hostile. Based on archival research and practical experience working in the community, Mark McAuley here provides a clear and comprehensive analysis of the progress made by human rights organisations in Russia and the challenges which will confront them in the future."

Author Info

Mary McAuley is an Associate of the International Centre for Prison Studies and a member of the International Advisory Committee for the website Rights in Russia. Between 1995 and 2002 she headed the Ford Foundation s Moscow Office, with particular responsibility for the human rights and legal reform programme. Previously she pursued an academic career, including posts at York, Essex, Wisconsin Madison, Berkeley and St Hilda s College, Oxford. She is the author of Children in Custody: Anglo-Russian Perspectives; Russia s Politics of Uncertainty and Soviet Politics 1917-1991."

Review

‘This is a highly informative account of an important and interesting topic. It charts the development of human rights in Russia, from the disintegration of the USSR to recent times. Written by an internationally renowned specialist of Russia who has extensive first-hand experience of Russian domestic politics and the development of civil society after communism, it uses that experience and a large number of interviews with Russians engaged in the field to chronicle the rocky development of human rights organizations in Russia.’
Margot Light, Professor Emeritus of International Relations, London School of Economics and Political Science

Bibliographic Info

Imprint: I.B.Tauris
Publisher: I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd

Hardback
ISBN: 9781784531256
Publication Date: 29 Apr 2015
Number of Pages: 320
Height: 216
Width: 138
Illustrations: 21 bw in 8pp plates

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