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Introduction Russia’s political development has been mixed since the fall of Soviet Union in 1991. An optimistic burst of activity in the early 1990s pushed the country from Soviet rule toward a greater emphasis on individual rights, but the country is now widely considered to be under authoritarian rule, or at least to be moving decisively toward centralization. At best, Russia can be seen as a "hybrid regime" or "competitive authoritarianism" that blends in some elements of electoral democracy. Russia’s trajectory since 1991 is one in which a democratizing moment has been followed by a return to more centralized power and decision making by a closed set of economic and political elites (Dickovick and Eastwood, 2015: 533). However, the central argument of this study is that the current Russian order is not participatory, democratic, and liberal enough due to personalization and centralization of political and economic powers by the executive body. As a result, the Russian political culture is struggling to construct a democratic fabric for the citizens based on equality, justice, rule of law, freedom, separation of powers, and egalitarian distribution. Institutional reform or re-design in the executive body, especially in the chief executive, would be a great initiative in order to visualize as well as build a democratic and liberal Russian order.
Wirtschaftselite, oligarchy, political elite, Politikwissenschaft, political culture, politische Macht, Russia, centralization, political development, Liberalisierung, liberalization, politische Elite, politische Kultur, political power, Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture, Political science, autoritäres System, politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur, politische Entwicklung, UdSSR-Nachfolgestaat, Demokratisierung, USSR successor state, Zentralisierung, authoritarian system, Oligarchie, democratization, economic elite, Russland, 10500, ddc: ddc:320
Wirtschaftselite, oligarchy, political elite, Politikwissenschaft, political culture, politische Macht, Russia, centralization, political development, Liberalisierung, liberalization, politische Elite, politische Kultur, political power, Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture, Political science, autoritäres System, politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur, politische Entwicklung, UdSSR-Nachfolgestaat, Demokratisierung, USSR successor state, Zentralisierung, authoritarian system, Oligarchie, democratization, economic elite, Russland, 10500, ddc: ddc:320
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