Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine

Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and Putin’s announcement of partial mobilisation in September 2022, demonstrations broke out in several of Russia’s ethnic republics. At the same time, ethnic minorities and Indigenous activists created anti-war organisations that al...

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Main Author: Efimov, Beatrice
Other Authors: Pożarlik, Grzegorz, juhendaja, Pavlova, Elena, juhendaja, Tartu Ülikool. Sotsiaalteaduste valdkond, Tartu Ülikool. Johan Skytte poliitikauuringute instituut
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Tartu Ülikool 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10062/105874
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author Efimov, Beatrice
author2 Pożarlik, Grzegorz, juhendaja
Pavlova, Elena, juhendaja
Tartu Ülikool. Sotsiaalteaduste valdkond
Tartu Ülikool. Johan Skytte poliitikauuringute instituut
author_facet Efimov, Beatrice
author_sort Efimov, Beatrice
collection University of Tartu: Dspace
description Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and Putin’s announcement of partial mobilisation in September 2022, demonstrations broke out in several of Russia’s ethnic republics. At the same time, ethnic minorities and Indigenous activists created anti-war organisations that also demanded for the decolonisation of Russia. These organisations have received a lot of attention outside of Russia and have been presented as forming a united anti-war and decolonial movement. Despite these organisations sharing many similarities, they have different aims, strategies and understandings of decolonisation. This thesis aims to explore whether or not it is possible to speak of a united anti-war and decolonial movement. It does so by comparing the similarities and differences in online collective identity construction processes on Instagram between two prominent anti-war and decolonial organisations: Free Buryatia Foundation and Free Yakutia Foundation. The findings indicate that both organisations share important similarities in the construction of online collective identity, such as by emphasising the importance of building interethnic alliances; identifying the same issues negatively impacting their structural positions; and employing strategies that, although different, are driven by the politicisation of culture, identity and politics. Based on this, it is reasonable to conclude that there is evidence of a shared collective identity that could suggest the existence of a broader united anti-war and decolonial movement. https://www.ester.ee/record=b5711729*est
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spelling fttartuuniv:oai:dspace.ut.ee:10062/105874 2025-04-27T14:37:00+00:00 Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine Efimov, Beatrice Pożarlik, Grzegorz, juhendaja Pavlova, Elena, juhendaja Tartu Ülikool. Sotsiaalteaduste valdkond Tartu Ülikool. Johan Skytte poliitikauuringute instituut 2024 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10062/105874 en eng Tartu Ülikool https://hdl.handle.net/10062/105874 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Estonia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ee/ magistritööd Venemaa-Ukraina sõda 2014- etnilised vähemused dekoloniseerimine patsifism grupiidentiteet Thesis 2024 fttartuuniv 2025-04-03T04:25:21Z Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and Putin’s announcement of partial mobilisation in September 2022, demonstrations broke out in several of Russia’s ethnic republics. At the same time, ethnic minorities and Indigenous activists created anti-war organisations that also demanded for the decolonisation of Russia. These organisations have received a lot of attention outside of Russia and have been presented as forming a united anti-war and decolonial movement. Despite these organisations sharing many similarities, they have different aims, strategies and understandings of decolonisation. This thesis aims to explore whether or not it is possible to speak of a united anti-war and decolonial movement. It does so by comparing the similarities and differences in online collective identity construction processes on Instagram between two prominent anti-war and decolonial organisations: Free Buryatia Foundation and Free Yakutia Foundation. The findings indicate that both organisations share important similarities in the construction of online collective identity, such as by emphasising the importance of building interethnic alliances; identifying the same issues negatively impacting their structural positions; and employing strategies that, although different, are driven by the politicisation of culture, identity and politics. Based on this, it is reasonable to conclude that there is evidence of a shared collective identity that could suggest the existence of a broader united anti-war and decolonial movement. https://www.ester.ee/record=b5711729*est Thesis Yakutia University of Tartu: Dspace
spellingShingle magistritööd
Venemaa-Ukraina sõda
2014-
etnilised vähemused
dekoloniseerimine
patsifism
grupiidentiteet
Efimov, Beatrice
Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title_full Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title_fullStr Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title_full_unstemmed Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title_short Not our war. A comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine
title_sort not our war. a comparison of two anti-war and decolonial organisations' collective identity construction processes in light of putin's full-scale invasion of ukraine
topic magistritööd
Venemaa-Ukraina sõda
2014-
etnilised vähemused
dekoloniseerimine
patsifism
grupiidentiteet
topic_facet magistritööd
Venemaa-Ukraina sõda
2014-
etnilised vähemused
dekoloniseerimine
patsifism
grupiidentiteet
url https://hdl.handle.net/10062/105874