Abstract

Amid the intensification of state control over the digital domain in Russia, what types of online activism are tolerated or even endorsed by the government and why? While entities such as the Anti-Corruption Foundation exposing the state are silenced through various tactics such as content blocking and removal, labelling the foundation a “foreign agent,” and deeming it “extremist,” other formations of citizens using digital media to expose “offences” performed by fellow citizens are operating freely. This article focuses on a vigilante group targeting “unscrupulous” merchants (often ethnic minorities and labour migrants) for the alleged sale of expired produce—the Hrushi Protiv. Supported by the government, Hrushi Protiv participants survey grocery chain stores and open-air markets for expired produce, a practice that often escalates into violence, while the process is filmed and edited to be uploaded to YouTube. These videos constitute unique media products that entertain the audience, ensuring the longevity of punitive measures via public exposure and shaming. Relying on Litvinenko and Toepfl’s (2019) application of Toepfl’s (2020) “leadership-critical,” “policy-critical,” and “uncritical” publics theory in the context of Russia, this article proposes a new category to describe state-approved digital vigilantes—citizen-critical publics. A collaboration with such publics allows the state to demonstrate a façade of civil society activism amid its silencing; while state-approved participants gain financial rewards and fame. Through Foucauldian discourse analysis, the article reveals that vulnerable groups such as labour migrants and ethnic minorities could fall victim to the side effects of this collaboration.

Highlights

  • Since 2010, in grocery store chains and open‐air food markets across Russia, one can witness people wearing full‐body pig costumes surveilling shelves and counters for expired products

  • This article provided a detailed account of Hrushi Protiv activists operating across and beyond Russia

  • Having addressed the peculiarities of vigilante practices in Russia, the article demonstrated that the state plays a central role inapproving digitally mediated citizen‐ led initiatives as part of its strategies for the garden‐ ing of authoritarian publics (Litvinenko & Toepfl, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Since 2010, in grocery store chains and open‐air food markets across Russia, one can witness people wearing full‐body pig costumes surveilling shelves and counters for expired products. Such raids tend to escalate into verbal confrontations and physical violence between merchants and amateur inspectors who film everything and share edited videos on YouTube and other social media platforms, making them available to wide audi‐ ences. Established in 2005, as a continuation of another pro‐government organisa‐ tion, Idushchiye Vmestye (Walking Together), Nashi, known as Putin’s Youth, was endorsed and sponsored by the state while actively supporting Vladimir Putin (see Hemment, 2012; Khalymonchik, 2016).

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