Censorship and Self-Censorship in Russia | Wilson Center

Posted: May 4, 2020 at 3:44 am

State control on information and media and aggressive pressure on journalists seeking to maintain their independence are critical elementsof the modern Russian state. Although the Russian constitution has an article expressly prohibiting censorship, in reality censorship is a constant factor in the life of the Russian media. Censorship is carried out both directly and indirectly by state pressure and through self-censorship by journalists. The Kennan Institute hosted three well-known Russian publicists, analysts, and commentators, Konstantin Sonin, Konstantin Eggert, and Gleb Cherkasov, to discuss censorship and self-censorship in Russia and its role in Russian society.

Konstantin Sonin, John Dewey Distinguished Service Professor, University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy

"I think the second main reason leaders want censorship is because they just do not want bad things said about them. So I think a lot of frustration is not that they really fear a revolution or they really feel that theyre going to be punished for their corruption, but they just find that its extremely unpleasant to read about their corruption. So they dislike it."

"Now that 20 years have passed of Mr. Putins rule, a lot of people dont need to be told what to say, and how to present certain topics. They already know. Its not self-censorship; its just living in censorship."

"Media does not exist in a vacuum. And, essentially, if Russian society figures out that its right to know is an important right for it, then a lot of things will fall into place."

Gleb Cherkasov, Journalist; Former Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Kommersant (Live translation from Russian)

"We are living at a time of technological revolution in the media, and it is much easier now to create your own media than it was five to ten years ago. And so, its really incomparable: [the] technological advances we have now [and] those we had in the 90s. If you want to create some kind of product, all of us can have the tools. It may not necessarily be professional, but we have the technological basis to just pull out a phone and be newsmakers."

"Over the past year and a half, like mushrooms after a rain, we see small media projects that are being done by young people, very different young people. These media projects are about various news [items], various themes, and cover different subjects. The process is evolving, and I personally call this Media 3.0. Its usually a small partnership of people who are not connected with an official media market who produce a product, satisfying their own professional ambitions."

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Censorship and Self-Censorship in Russia | Wilson Center

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