Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Historical Patterns of Russian Political Development
- 2 Soviet Legacies for Post-Soviet Russia
- 3 The 1990‘s in Russia: A New Time of Troubles?
- 4 Russia's “Neopatrimonial” Political System, 1992–2004
- 5 The Russian 1990s in Comparative Perspective
- 6 What Future for Russia? Liberal Economics and Illiberal Geography
- Conclusions
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Historical Patterns of Russian Political Development
- 2 Soviet Legacies for Post-Soviet Russia
- 3 The 1990‘s in Russia: A New Time of Troubles?
- 4 Russia's “Neopatrimonial” Political System, 1992–2004
- 5 The Russian 1990s in Comparative Perspective
- 6 What Future for Russia? Liberal Economics and Illiberal Geography
- Conclusions
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Our country is vast and rich but disorder reigns throughout…. Come and rule us.
– Delegation from Novgorod to a Scandinavian prince, AD 862.Although Russia lacks a tradition of vigorous self-government, it does not necessarily follow that it has one of bureaucratic centralism.
– Richard PipesOn the Importance of the State in the Russian Setting
A recurrent theme in the discussion of Russian history, fortunately less frequent in that history itself, is that of “the time of troubles” (smutnoye vremya in Russian). The English translation provides but a pale sense of what Russians understand by the term: an apparently indefinite period of profound economic and social crisis in the body politic, characterized by the collapse of state authority, a crisis magnified by the comparative weakness of Russia's non-state institutions to fill the gap opened by the disintegration of rule from above. Unregulated struggles over political succession, secession of outlying territories, civil strife, foreign intervention, and above all death, on the mass scale, have all been directly associated with Russia's several times of troubles, both in the popular imagination and in actual fact. In practice, the infliction of mass death has also been associated with periods of overweening state authority, as the reigns of Peter I (“the Great,” 1689–1725) and Josif Stalin (ca. 1927–53) demonstrate. Yet arguably it has been the fear of the consequences attending the decomposition of the state rather than its apotheosis as an unresponsive autocratic Leviathan that touches the raw nerve of Russian political culture.
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- Chapter
- Information
- How Russia Is Not RuledReflections on Russian Political Development, pp. 1 - 17Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005