Covid-19 and the Russian Regional Response

Matthew Blackburn, Derek S. Hutcheson, Elena Tsumarova, B. Petersson
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Abstract

As was the case with other federal states, Russia’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic was decentralized and devolved responsibility to regional governors. Contrary to the common highly centralized governance in Russia, this approach is thought to have helped insulate the government from criticism. Using local research and analysis based on a national representative survey carried out at the height of the pandemic during the summer of 2021, the article charts the public response to the pandemic across Russia. It examines the regionalization of the response, with an in-depth focus on two of the Russian cities with the highest infection rates but differing responses to the pandemic: St. Petersburg and Petrozavodsk. There are two main findings: at one level, the diffusion of responsibility meant little distinction was made between the different levels of government by the population; at another level, approval of the pandemic measures was tied strongly to trust levels in central and regional government.
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Covid-19和俄罗斯区域应对措施
与其他联邦州的情况一样,俄罗斯对COVID-19大流行的反应是分散的,并将责任下放给地区州长。与俄罗斯普遍的高度集中的治理相反,这种方法被认为有助于使政府免受批评。根据在2021年夏季大流行高峰期进行的全国代表性调查进行的当地研究和分析,本文绘制了俄罗斯各地公众对大流行的反应。报告审查了应对措施的区域化情况,重点深入关注俄罗斯感染率最高但应对措施不同的两个城市:圣彼得堡和彼得罗扎沃茨克。主要有两项发现:在一级,责任的分散意味着不同级别的人民政府之间几乎没有区别;在另一个层面上,对大流行措施的批准与对中央和地方政府的信任程度密切相关。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊最新文献
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