RUSSIAN INFORMATION SPACE, RUSSIAN SCHOLARSHIP, AND KREMLIN CONTROLS Cover Image

RUSSIAN INFORMATION SPACE, RUSSIAN SCHOLARSHIP, AND KREMLIN CONTROLS
RUSSIAN INFORMATION SPACE, RUSSIAN SCHOLARSHIP, AND KREMLIN CONTROLS

Author(s): Natalya Kovaleva
Subject(s): Communication studies, Government/Political systems, Security and defense, ICT Information and Communications Technologies
Published by: NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence
Keywords: Russia; information space; internet; media; Russian scholarship; information control;

Summary/Abstract: Fueled by Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the question of how authoritarian regimes like Russia seek to influence information domains of foreign states has received unprecedented attention within the disciplines of security and strategic communications. However, we have yet to examine more deeply the Russian conceptualization of information space and the Kremlin’s ability to exert control over its domestic information domain. The present study contributes toward filling these gaps by providing a more holistic understanding of the term ‘information space’ as it appears in Russian scholarship, and by analyzing the effectiveness of the economic and legal tools used by the Kremlin to establish control over the domestic information space. Ultimately, the study finds that whilst the Kremlin has been able to exert considerable influence over content production and distribution in certain spheres of the broader information space, it clearly enjoys only limited control over the new, increasingly Internet dominated spaces and environments.

  • Issue Year: 4/2018
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 133-171
  • Page Count: 39
  • Language: English
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