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Russia
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posted:
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The Russian Federation

Russia

Eurasia (10 time zones) 1.8 times the

territory of the US

Secular tradition of authoritarianism, police

state, and violence against the poor,

minorities, and peasants.

Multiple ethnic groups

Rich in natural resources (oil & minerals)

in Siberia.

Historical Overview

≠ Western Europe (Late Absolutism: serfdom

and slavery)

Markets glued ≠ Despotic power glued Russia

Western Europe nomads and free peasants



Roots in the Muscovite state (12th century)

Tsars (―Ivan the Terrible‖…Absolutist monarchs)



18th century Russian Enlightenment: Saint

Petersburg (thousands die in building the city

in a swamp)

Precursors in matters of political & secret police

19th Century’s Failed Liberalization

Alexander I’s attempt of reform stopped by

Napoleonic wars. Alexander’s death in 1825

(problems of succession) Liberal reform crushed.

Nicholas I (anti-modern, anti- Enlightenment), dies

in the Crimean war (1853-56). Russian defeat.

Nicholas I dies in the war

Alexander II: Time of (Limited) Reform

Liberation of serfs (1871), allows regional

assemblies, encourages industrialization (but

opposes a constitutional regime). Assassinated in

1881

(Russian traditions: political police, political

repression, and anarchism)

The Last Absolutist State

Alexander III: renewed political repression (15 years)

Nicholas II: Bloody Sunday (father Gapon) 1905 Revolution

Sergei Eisenstein’s October

The tsar promises civil liberties and a legislature (the Duma)

1914 Russia enters WWI

1917 riots lead to the Revolution in February (Lenin’s April

Theses). Moderate government (Liberal/Socialist) led

by Kerensky. Brief experience with Liberal democracy

1917 (October) revolution. Radicalization of the revolution

(Bolsheviks). Lenin’s leadership

• Communist Party of Soviet 60 Union (CPSU), also known

as the Bolschevik Party. Centralized and authoritarian

party organized by Lenin (Vanguard).

Lenin's New Economic Policy: mixed system controlled by

the govt. with participation of small private companies.

Economic growth.

Stalinism/Totalitarianism

1924 Lenin's death  Stalin (Central

planning) Major and fast industrialization

of the country  Collectivization (state

farms) (20,000,000 die) and Purges (1937)

• Totalitarian regime. The Bolschevik Party

dominated all aspects of society and the

economy.

• Party’s ties with the government and KGB

(security police, an essential instrument of

party’s domination)

• Police State

• Chronology of the Soviet Period

Main (Political?) Institutions

• For traditional Marxism, politics is a tool of class

domination, and parliamentary arrangements and political

parties represent different class alliances

– No need for politics, parties (or the state) in a classless

society.

• Soviets (―All-Russia Congress of Soviets of Workers',

Peasants, Cossacks' and Red Army Soldiers' Deputies‖)

and the Congress of Soviets within a Federation.

• Age of suffrage: 18. Vote for representatives of the local

soviet (every 2½ years). Representatives choose the

highest authorities (Central Committee)

– Politburo (policy authority)

• ―Partocracy‖: absolute overlap between party and state

– 300,000 officials (Top leadership: Individuals or oligarchies)

• De facto authority of the General Secretary of the

Communist Party after Stalin (elected by the Central

Committee).

Culture or Institutions?

• Soviets on paper

• Soviets (?) in reality



How far can we go in transforming patterns

of political culture?

From Stalin to Gorbachev

• 1953 Stalin’s death.

• Krushnev’s 1954 speech denouncing Stalin’s crimes

• Khrushchev/Brezhnev/Andropov/Chernenko/Gorbachev

• Attempts of reform

• Mid-1980s Glasnost (openness) and perestroika. Party

secretary-general Gorbachev followed Krushnev’s attempts.

Goal: to make Soviet socialism more modern and efficient

and to give a voice to Soviet citizens. Steps:

1-Traditional Soviet Methods

2-Glasnost and democratization

3-Programs of Reform

4-Multiple demands of reform…Crisis

• Pandora’s box

• Gorbachev creates a presidential system and becomes

President (March 1990)

Yeltsin

1989-91 Yeltsin gains support in Moscow

June 1991, Yeltsin becomes President of the

Russian Republic (and begins disputing power to

Gorbachev)

Five republics claim independence

• Gorbachev intends to (re)create a Union

• August 1991 (Russian) Attempt of military coup

leads to Gorbachev’s abandoning government

and a collapse of the Soviet Union  chaotic

transition

• Birth of the Russian Federation (December

1991)

Russian Reforms

"Shock Therapy" (opposed by parliament

and the vice-president)



Modern markets or "economic genocide―?

1992: Yeltsin Vs. the Parliament

A new type of government?

–Yeltsin: a strong presidency (≈ France’s Fifth Republic)

–Parliament: parliamentary system

•Stalemate: Yeltsin’s rule by decree

– April 1993: Referendum (Yeltsin or the Parliament? Yeltsin

won for 59% with a turnout of only 39%, a result deemed

illegal by the Constitutional Court)

•Yeltsin ordered the dissolution of the Congress and the Supreme

Soviet (declared illegal by the Constitutional Court), suspended

the Constitution and called for elections for a new parliament, the

State Duma, and a referendum to vote for his own project of

Constitution

•The Parliament asked the military for support against Yeltsin &

designated ―President‖ Rutskoi (vice president)

•Yeltsin sent troops against the Parliament (150 deaths, 1,000

wounded, 2,000 jailed)

Yeltsin’s Hegemony

• Authoritarian rule

• Banned opposition

• Removal of members of the Constitutional

Court and provincial leaders who opposed

dissolving the Parliament

• Call for parliamentary elections on

December 1993 (triumph of Yeltsin’s

opposition—Zhirinovsky’s nationalist

Liberal Democratic party, the Agrarian and

the Communist parties)

Boris Yeltsin 1991-1999.

Yeltsin’s government: inept, corrupt and

too closely tied to the economic

oligarchs who had become very wealthy

with the privatization of Soviet-era

assets.

•Not so glorious departure

•Yeltsin picked Vladmir Putin, a former KGB

officer, to replace him (appointed prime

minister and then elected as president)

1993 Constitution

Federal System (Government centered

in Moscow/ 89 different subnational

units).



Bilateral agreements between each

region and the federal government

1993 Constitution

Executive power: Strong Presidency (rule by decree—

decrees must cohere with the legal framework, veto

power).

Chief of State: President (no vice-president)

Head of government: Premier (appointed by the President)

Cabinet (appointed by the President)

Presidential Administration (huge bureaucratic apparatus)

Security Council

Legislative Power

Russian Federal Assembly (Bicameral Legislature)

State Duma (Lower Chamber ): 450 members, 225 are

elected through PR and 225 are elected through SMD. 5%

threshold. The Duma has power to impeach the President

and dissolve the government.

Federation Council (Upper Chamber: ) (178 members,

chosen by the 89 regions). Must approve (major)

presidential appointments in the judiciary.

Judiciary

Constitutional Court: (19 judges-cannot be fired)

(Multi?) Party System

-Passage from one-party system to

many (changing) parties

-Strong nationalism

-Survival of communism (electoral

potential varies)

Putin

• 1999 Yeltsin’s resignation

• April 2000 election: Putin wins over 11

candidates with 53% of votes

• Weak State, paralyzed economy

• Economic collapse, organized crime, corruption,

disintegration of public health and public

education, generalized destitution, Chechnyan

separatism, terrorism…

• ―Strong state‖ policy & struggle against regional

governors and their political and economic

leadership… Human rights?

Roger E. Kanet & John S.

Reshetar’s Conclusion



• By 1996, Russia had made substantial

progress in establishing the bases for a

functioning democratic system

• Challenges: strengthening the rule of law,

respect for human rights, improving

economic performance

Failed Crusade?

• 1998 Default

• Alexander Solzhenitsyn (2000): ―As a result of the

Yeltsin era, all the fundamental sectors of our

state, economic, cultural, and moral life have been

destroyed or looted. We live literally amid ruins, but

we pretend to have a normal life… We heard that

great reforms were being carried out in the country.

They were false reforms, because they left more

than half of our country’s people in poverty… What

does it mean to continue these reforms? Will we

continue looting and destroying Russia until

nothing is left?... God fobid these reforms should

continue.‖

Failed Crusade? (Cohen)

• Stephen Cohen: reforms during the 1990s ―has

contributed to a human tragedy on a massive

scale and, for the first time in history, the

destabilization of a fully nuclearized country.‖ (xii)

• Flourishing of two cities, Moscow & Saint

Petersburg, amidst poverty (70-75% population)



• More new orphans appeared in the 1990s than

those resulting from 30,000,000 Russian

casualties during WWII

• Robber Barons

Democracy & the Market:

Friends or Enemies?

Mancur Olson: Power & Prosperity

Rational Choice tradition (Individuals = Maximizers)

State ≈ Bandits (maximizer individuals) (Public Goods)

Different GAMES

Predatory Bandits: to take as much as possible from a place

and then leave (Short Term)

Stationary Bandits: have incentives to stay and make a

smaller but permanent profit (Long Term)… Rulers

Humanity has made progress to the extent that has provided

“incentive for roving banding leaders to settle down and

become rulers.” (Olson)

The only way of replacing banditry for rule arises from

democratic arrangements, which emerge from ―a balance of

power among a small number of leaders, groups, or families—

that is, by a broadly equal dispersion of power that makes it

imprudent for any leader or group to attempt to overpower the

others.‖

Develop ―games‖ (coercion and incentives) to lead self-interested

individuals to act in ways that are compatible with the general

good.


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