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“Foreign Agents” Legislation: Between Democratic Resilience and Weaponized Transparency

Featuring Maxim Krupskiy, Former visiting scholar of the Russia and Eurasia Program at The Fletcher School 

The ongoing authoritarian backsliding in countries around the world in recent decades has forced democracies to seek new tools to respond to illiberal challenges. One such tool is the legislation on so-called foreign agents and its analogues. While this legislation is designed to make hidden foreign influence more transparent, it can have a negative impact on democratic order and lead to its erosion.

Using the Russian example, Galina Starovoitova Fellow Maxim Krupskiy will discuss how non-democratic regimes have effectively used foreign agents legislation and its weaknesses as a tool of repression against dissenters and civil society. This presentation will demonstrate the risks that this legislation entails, as well as possible approaches to its improvement from the perspective of the resilient democracy concept.

See the full discussion here.

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