Russia’s Islam has been much more than the two Chechen wars, and regular terrorist actions that have shaken the Russian territory. Islam constitutes an integral part of Russia’s history and culture, and the Putin regime regularly celebrates Islam’s contribution to the country and its great power reassertion. Corps analyses Labor migrations from the North Caucasus as well as from Central Asia to Russia’s main metropoles, a dynamic Islamic Runet debating about Islam in Russian, and the—apparent only—paradoxical marriage of convenience between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Muftiates contribute to this alignment of interests between the Russian regime and its Muslim constituencies, far away from the simplistic, black and white vision promoted by Western media of a Russia intrinsically opposed to Islam. This paper discusses this fragile balance between securitizing Islam(ism) as a threat to the country’s stability and multinational harmony and recognizing Muslim citizens as a central support for the Kremlin, both in terms of electoral provision, authoritarian practices, and promotion of conservative values.
Laruelle, Marlène Agnès. (2021). Russia’s Islam. Balancing Securitization and Integration. RUSSIE.NEI.VISIONS no. 125. Institut Français des Relations Internationales (IFRI). https://www.ifri.org/en/papers/russias-islam-balancing-securitization-and-integration
Russia’s Islam. Balancing Securitization and Integration
Marlène Agnès Laruelle
2021
Abstract
Russia’s Islam has been much more than the two Chechen wars, and regular terrorist actions that have shaken the Russian territory. Islam constitutes an integral part of Russia’s history and culture, and the Putin regime regularly celebrates Islam’s contribution to the country and its great power reassertion. Corps analyses Labor migrations from the North Caucasus as well as from Central Asia to Russia’s main metropoles, a dynamic Islamic Runet debating about Islam in Russian, and the—apparent only—paradoxical marriage of convenience between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Muftiates contribute to this alignment of interests between the Russian regime and its Muslim constituencies, far away from the simplistic, black and white vision promoted by Western media of a Russia intrinsically opposed to Islam. This paper discusses this fragile balance between securitizing Islam(ism) as a threat to the country’s stability and multinational harmony and recognizing Muslim citizens as a central support for the Kremlin, both in terms of electoral provision, authoritarian practices, and promotion of conservative values.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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