含羞草研究室

Published June 07, 2018 by Tom Porter

Does Moscow Garbage Crisis Represent the Biggest Threat to Putin?

Garbage is piling up in landfills around Moscow, writes government professor Laura Henry in “The Conversation,” and the resulting pollution has led to a wave of citizen protests “that potentially poses a greater challenge to Putin’s government than pro-democracy activism.”
Laura Henry
Laura Henry

As Moscow grows in size and population, an ever-increasing quantity of garbage is being produced in the Russian capital, and this could be a problem for the government, says Associate Professor of Government Laura A. Henry, a scholar of contemporary Russian politics. Writing in , she describes how the “resulting mountains of refuse emit noxious fumes and leach pollutants into nearby waters, endangering the residents of the region around Moscow.” 

Protests against these dumps are growing, explains Henry, who researched the topic while in Russia on a recent sabbatical. “I believe these garbage protests reveal a crisis of basic governance that potentially poses a greater challenge to Putin’s government than pro-democracy activism,” she says.