How Russians Understand the New Russia

205,00 lei
La comandă
205.00
This product has not been ordered yet

Personalize product

Add the product in basket to personalize it

Local courier shipping
2 - 4 days
$16.50
UPS ground shipping
4 - 6 days
$19.00
Local pickup from store
$0.00
Product thumb
How Russians Understand the New Russia
205,00 lei

Categorii: Necatalogate, Neclasificate

Limba: Engleza

Data publicării: 2025

Editura: Princeton University Press

Tip copertă: Hardcover

Nr Pag: 208

ISBN: 9780691258645

Dimensiuni: l: 15.6cm | H: 23.5cm | 2.3cm | 462g

Product thumb
How Russians Understand the New Russia
205,00 lei

Descriere

The issues that are the most and the least divisive in Russia.


The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 created a new Russia, with new territorial boundaries and new political and economic systems. The hybrid political economy that emerged incorporated commitments to markets and democracy that were undermined by the state’s economic interventions and authoritarian restrictions.

In this book, Paul Chaisty and Stephen Whitefield argue that the hybridity of the post-Soviet system provided a strong basis for the consolidation of Russian public opinion―and for the management of contestation so that it did not threaten the system itself. Drawing on almost thirty years of original public opinion research in Russia, Chaisty and Whitefield also find, however, that the territorial dimension of Russia’s postcommunist transformation has disrupted public support for the hybrid political economy. In particular, they trace the reopening of system-level disagreement between system supporters and system opponents to the nationalist turn in Russian politics that culminated in the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the reactivation of Soviet identities.

How Russians Understand the New Russia provides the first longitudinal study of Russian public opinion on the system of political and economic power that replaced communism. It offers unique insights into how Russian citizens have adapted their views of the new Russia, identifying the issues that are the most―and the least―divisive. Chaisty and Whitefield track Russian public opinion on a broad range of policy questions, discuss the political importance of both voting and not voting and consider problems of nation-building and national identity.

Finally, they weigh the impact of the Ukraine war on Russia’s hybrid system, and whether consolidation or further contestation is more likely.


Filters Wishlist Menu 4 $265.00
Top