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Articles

No Room

What Has Changed in Russia's System of Repression During the Past Year

Pages 404-413 | Published online: 18 Oct 2016
 

Abstract

In 2015, Russia's judicial system saw a marked expansion in the repressive activity of the law enforcement bodies. For the first time in many years, there was a significant rise in the frequency of sentences involving imprisonment, while standards of proof in the Russian courts declined. The judiciary tried to compensate for its inability to resist pressure from the law enforcement bodies through the unprecedented application of amnesty in court verdicts. Sporadically declared amnesties have become almost the only thing protecting the Russian penal system from overcrowding.

Notes

English translation © 2016 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC, from the Russian text “Mest net: chto izmenilos' v repressivnoi sisteme Rossii za proshlyi god.” Published with the author's permission. Ella Paneiakh is a sociologist. Translated by Stephen D. Shenfield.

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