Between a Liberal and a Hard Place: Russia and Global Ideological Competition Cover Image
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Between a Liberal and a Hard Place: Russia and Global Ideological Competition
Between a Liberal and a Hard Place: Russia and Global Ideological Competition

Author(s): Elizaveta Gaufman
Subject(s): Civil Society, Government/Political systems, International relations/trade, Politics and society, Sociology of Politics, Globalization
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Russia; global ideological competition; conservative movements; liberalism; Russian foreign policy; new social movements; Russian liberalism; radical conservatism;

Summary/Abstract: The National Research Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IMEMO) report points out that the world would experience an ‘‘increasing competition between states in the economic, military and ideological spheres’’ (emphasis added). Even though on the face of it, this passage might sound as a phrase from the Cold War era, the ideological competition around the world (Adamson, 2005) is intensifying with historical levels of polarization (Somer and McCoy, 2018). Russia occupies in this regard a favorable position as it may seem attractive to diverging ideological fractions: from different segments of conservative movement around the world, such as White nationalists who see Russia as ‘‘the last White country’’ to Christian fundamentalists who mistakenly assume that Russia has a homogenous Orthodox population; from opponents of perceived American hegemony to quasiliberal Western public intellectuals and politicians who depend on Russia to perpetuate their Orientalist and civilizationalist narratives (Ragozin, 2020). In other words, Russia as a country has become a simulacrum in the global ideological competition that reflects the preexisting biases of diverse ideologues.

  • Issue Year: 28/2020
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 481-485
  • Page Count: 5
  • Language: English