Sudden Departures
Russian Exiles Between Putin and the West
Part of the New Perspectives on Eastern Europe and Eurasia seriesAlmost a million Russians went into exile after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Description
This study reveals how dissident activism continues in the face of repression. This book captures the largest post-Soviet exodus in Russian history, triggered by the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Through hundreds of interviews, the authors trace the journeys of those who fled Russia—crossing the steppes of Kazakhstan, the mountains of Armenia and Georgia, and even the Atlantic—in search of safety, belonging and peace.
Rejected by their homeland and confronted by global suspicion, these wartime exiles face the challenge of defining what it means to be Russian in an era of war and authoritarian retrenchment. Many turn to action as a path forward: mutual aid, support for Ukraine, anti-war activism. For others, survival is the priority.
Set against the backdrop of a shifting global order—renewed Great Power politics, tightening borders and migrant fatigue—Sudden Departures gives voice to a diaspora in motion. These stories offer a rare ground-level lens on exile, resistance and the high personal costs of standing against Putin’s regime.
Author(s)
Margarita Zavadskaya is a senior research fellow at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs. Her research focuses on political behaviour, authoritarianism and public opinion in Russia and post-Soviet states. Her work has been published in Electoral Studies; Democratization; Post-Soviet Affairs and other journals.
Andrei Semenov is Assistant Professor of Political Science and International Relations at Nazarbayev University. His research interests encompass protests, opposition and activism in autocracies. His most recent research appears in Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change; European Political Science and Social Movements Studies.
Regina Smyth is Professor of Political Science at Indiana University. Her research focuses on elections, protests and societal change in authoritarian regimes. Her recent work appears in the American Political Science Review; Post-Soviet Affairs and Communist and Post-Communist Studies.
