Human Rights in Russia

The Human Rights in Russia Project tracks, through survey data, the state of political and social development in Russia.
Creeping authoritarianism and growing nationalism are undermining democracy and rule of law in Russia. But Russia’s post-Soviet political trajectory remains a critical Euro-Atlantic security concern.
To better understand the state of political development, particularly human rights and rule of law, CSIS has, since 2001, conducted nearly a dozen public opinion surveys examining a range of issues on the following topics:
- Absent Memory
- Activism and Social Marketing
- Attitudes toward Human Rights
- Democracy Assistance and Elections
- HIV/AIDS
- Military Abuse
- The North Caucasus
- Police Violence
- Russian Domestic Politics and U.S. Policy
- Views of Russian Women on Trafficking, Prostitution, and Discrimination
CSIS is grateful to the donors that have made this work on human rights in Russia possible:
- Ford Foundation (2004-present)
- Charles Stewart Mott Foundation (2004-2007, 2009)
- The Glaser Progress Foundation (2002-2004)
- The National Council for Eurasian and Eastern European Research (NCEEER)(2003)
- The State Department- Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (2002-2005)
- USAID (2002-2004)
For the results of survey work on Human Rights in Russia please see our program publications, organized by subject area.
Multimedia
- AudioNov 19, 2008
DURATION: 01:36:51
Publications
- ReportMay 13, 2010
- ReportJan 14, 2010
Events
In the News
The Associated Press
Mar 31, 2010The Washington Post
Mar 30, 2010
Media Requests
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(202) 775-3242





