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Troubled Transitions: Partial Democracy in Russia

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NB: There will be no lecture on that day. NB: Cheating will result in a mark of zero! ... no election after independence. Yeltsin elected June 1991 (-1999) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Troubled Transitions: Partial Democracy in Russia


1
Troubled Transitions Partial Democracy in Russia
2
Spring Term Class Test
  • NEXT Wednesday
  • Here
  • 45 minutes duration
  • No dictionaries etc.
  • NB There will be no lecture on that day.
  • NB Cheating will result in a mark of zero!

3
Aims
  • To identify the transition context of Russia
  • to characterize the new political system
  • to explain why transition was more difficult than
    in Central Europe

4
The Context
  • a state of triple transition building
    democracy, capitalism and statehood
  • emerged from the failed Soviet federation
  • no previous history of statehood
  • the centre of empire, then of communism

5
Russia the problem of stateness and identity
  • humiliating loss of Great Power status
  • Not a nation-state
  • still a large multi-national federation
  • about 100 ethnic groups
  • about 150m people
  • many Russians now live in neighbouring states
  • 14 different neighbours

6
Russia her neighbours
7
How is it organised?
  • Almost 90 ethnic republics and non-ethnic
    (Russian) regions
  • republics are c. 15 of the population, c. 29 of
    the territory
  • most are mixed
  • despite ethnic base, some have more Russians
  • republics regions have different relations with
    the centre

8
Federal subjects
  • 21 Republics (ethnic)
  • 48 Oblasts (provinces)
  • 7 Krais (territories)
  • 1 autonomous (jewish) oblast
  • 7 autonomous okrugs (districts ethnic, more
    independence than oblasts, less than republics)
  • 2 federal cities (Moscow/St. Petersburg)
  • Grouped into 7 federal districts

9
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10
Asymmetric federalism
  • Bilateral agreements with Moscow
  • Republican Constitutions may contradict federal
    Constitution
  • often ignored presidential decrees, especially
    under Yeltsin
  • very different types of sub-political system
    from dictatorship to democracy
  • Chechenia/Chechnya still not reconciled

11
Chechenia
  • History of conquest and resistance since 18th
    century
  • Chechens suffered mass deportation under Stalin
    (1944)
  • returned to North Caucasus under Khrushchev
  • always distinctive
  • declared independence September 1991
  • de facto independence but not de jure
  • centre refused to permit secession
  • no international recognition

12
Civil War
  • Army invaded November 1991 but withdrew
  • Chechens renewed declaration of independence 1993
  • Russian military invasion First Chechen War
    1994-1996
  • Grozny razed
  • belief in quick victory proved false
  • huge losses on both sides

13
Civil War
  • conscripts could not defeat guerrillas
  • growing unpopularity as presidential election
    approached

14
Second Chechen War
  • Treaty brokered 1996 was not honoured
  • Putin determined to regain control
  • declared victory and direct rule from 2000
  • hollow victory
  • Moscow theatre crisis October 2002
  • Beslan siege September 2004
  • some spill over into neighbouring republics

15
Claimed as success
  • Russian candidates won elections of 2003 2005
  • Resistance leader liquidated March 2005
  • Pro-Russian clan in charge
  • victory against international terrorism
  • but resistance continues
  • challenging integrity of the state

16
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19
Political Power
  • No decisive break with old system
  • no election after independence
  • Yeltsin elected June 1991 (-1999)
  • Parliament elected 1990 (Soviet republican
    elections) still dominated by communists
  • most of new leadership came from the nomenklatura
  • President and Parliament quarrelled over new
    Constitution

20
Dominance of Presidency
  • September 1993 crisis
  • Yeltsin dissolved Parliament (illegal)
  • Many deputies refused to leave
  • street protests followed
  • military resolution
  • troops stormed Parliament
  • state of emergency declared
  • CPSU formally banned

21
1993 Constitution
  • Written by Yeltsin
  • confirmed by controversial referendum 12/93
  • hard to amend
  • very strong president (super-presidentialism)
  • weak Parliament
  • some law-making powers
  • but does not choose government

22
Hindered democratization
  • Too much central power but no strategy under
    Yeltsin
  • power dominated by oligarchs and close advisers
  • owed debt to military
  • weak Parliament has little say
  • government chosen by President
  • Federalism not part of a system of checks and
    balances

23
Election process questionable
  • Weak political parties
  • little power after election
  • few resources
  • access to media dominated by pro-presidential
    forces
  • dirty campaigns against opposition
  • only 2 parties have continuous presence
  • Communists
  • nationalists (Zhirinovsky)

24
Putins Presidency (2000-08)
  • Stress on strong state
  • reassertion of control of republics/regions
  • Deal with oligarchs
  • growing importance of security services
  • growing control of media
  • interference with judiciary
  • serious human rights abuses

25
Putin and Medvedev
  • Putin could not immediately stand for a 3rd term
    as president
  • Medvedev former chief of Putins presidential
    staff
  • Never held elective office before 2008
  • Selected by Putin as his successor
  • Appointed Putin as his PM
  • More liberal policies ???

26
Conclusion
  • complex transformation of complex state
  • Transition to where?
  • Partial democracy (perhaps)
  • Strong authoritarian features

27
Conclusion
  • Presidency is crucial
  • Popular alienation is acute
  • Ineffective vehicles of representation
  • weak parties
  • weak interest groups
  • Future is uncertain
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