Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Ferraro, Vicente
Data de Publicação: 2023
Tipo de documento: Conjunto de dados
Título da fonte: SciELO Data
Texto Completo: https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.7A4QOD
Resumo: <p>Contrary to Vladimir Putin's geopolitical arguments to justify the 2022 large-scale invasion of Ukraine, the confrontation has not benefited Russia's position in the European balance of power, though it may bring significant gains to his personalist autocracy. This paper aims to shed light on the causes of Russia's military aggression by addressing the following research questions: (1) Why did Russia invade Ukraine? (2) How do wars benefit autocrats? I argue that the securitization of the West and Ukraine as existential threats to Russia has been mobilized by Putin as a paramount regime legitimation strategy, aiming to boost his popularity, justify the crackdown on critics and oppositionists, empower the security establishment and reinforce nationalism and the regime's ideological precepts, such as the the supremacy of Russian "traditional" values over Western "decadent" liberal values – reference by Kremlin ideologues to LGBTQIA+ movements and representative democracy. I draw on a multi-methods research design, including survey analysis, discourse analysis, legislative content and inferential statistics. The results show that wars can benefit autocrats in different manners. The regime's survival is also a realpolitik goal: Putin and his security establishment need a hostile West and a threatful Ukraine for self-legitimation.</p>
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spelling https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.7A4QODFerraro, VicenteWhy Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocratsSciELO Data<p>Contrary to Vladimir Putin's geopolitical arguments to justify the 2022 large-scale invasion of Ukraine, the confrontation has not benefited Russia's position in the European balance of power, though it may bring significant gains to his personalist autocracy. This paper aims to shed light on the causes of Russia's military aggression by addressing the following research questions: (1) Why did Russia invade Ukraine? (2) How do wars benefit autocrats? I argue that the securitization of the West and Ukraine as existential threats to Russia has been mobilized by Putin as a paramount regime legitimation strategy, aiming to boost his popularity, justify the crackdown on critics and oppositionists, empower the security establishment and reinforce nationalism and the regime's ideological precepts, such as the the supremacy of Russian "traditional" values over Western "decadent" liberal values – reference by Kremlin ideologues to LGBTQIA+ movements and representative democracy. I draw on a multi-methods research design, including survey analysis, discourse analysis, legislative content and inferential statistics. The results show that wars can benefit autocrats in different manners. The regime's survival is also a realpolitik goal: Putin and his security establishment need a hostile West and a threatful Ukraine for self-legitimation.</p>2023-07-24info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessArts and HumanitiesRusso-Ukrainian WarWar in UkraineInvasion of UkraineAuthoritarianismAuthoritarian legitimationrally 'round the flagDiversionary War TheoryVladimir Putininfo:eu-repo/semantics/datasetinfo:eu-repo/semantics/datasetinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionDatasetreponame:SciELO Datainstname:Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)instacron:SCIRepositório de Dados de PesquisaONGhttps://data.scielo.org/oai/requestdata@scielo.orgopendoar:2024-04-11T06:12:59SciELO Data - Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)falsedoi:10.48331/scielodata.7A4QOD
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
title Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
spellingShingle Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
Ferraro, Vicente
Arts and Humanities
Russo-Ukrainian War
War in Ukraine
Invasion of Ukraine
Authoritarianism
Authoritarian legitimation
rally 'round the flag
Diversionary War Theory
Vladimir Putin
title_short Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
title_full Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
title_fullStr Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
title_full_unstemmed Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
title_sort Why Russia invaded Ukraine and how wars benefit autocrats
author Ferraro, Vicente
author_facet Ferraro, Vicente
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Ferraro, Vicente
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Arts and Humanities
Russo-Ukrainian War
War in Ukraine
Invasion of Ukraine
Authoritarianism
Authoritarian legitimation
rally 'round the flag
Diversionary War Theory
Vladimir Putin
topic Arts and Humanities
Russo-Ukrainian War
War in Ukraine
Invasion of Ukraine
Authoritarianism
Authoritarian legitimation
rally 'round the flag
Diversionary War Theory
Vladimir Putin
description <p>Contrary to Vladimir Putin's geopolitical arguments to justify the 2022 large-scale invasion of Ukraine, the confrontation has not benefited Russia's position in the European balance of power, though it may bring significant gains to his personalist autocracy. This paper aims to shed light on the causes of Russia's military aggression by addressing the following research questions: (1) Why did Russia invade Ukraine? (2) How do wars benefit autocrats? I argue that the securitization of the West and Ukraine as existential threats to Russia has been mobilized by Putin as a paramount regime legitimation strategy, aiming to boost his popularity, justify the crackdown on critics and oppositionists, empower the security establishment and reinforce nationalism and the regime's ideological precepts, such as the the supremacy of Russian "traditional" values over Western "decadent" liberal values – reference by Kremlin ideologues to LGBTQIA+ movements and representative democracy. I draw on a multi-methods research design, including survey analysis, discourse analysis, legislative content and inferential statistics. The results show that wars can benefit autocrats in different manners. The regime's survival is also a realpolitik goal: Putin and his security establishment need a hostile West and a threatful Ukraine for self-legitimation.</p>
publishDate 2023
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2023-07-24
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