In attempts to describe post-communist politics adequately, this paper employs the concept of delegative democracy for analyzing Russia's local politics. It argues that the election rather than appointment by the President of local governors in Russia has facilitated the establishment of a system which can be generally described as delegative democracy. This regime inherits free and contested elections from the democratic system and non-democratic methods of power consolidation from the authoritarian system. As a mixture of those two hardly reconcilable types of political system, delegative democracy in Russia has gained a shape and reached a certain degree of stability during 1993–95. This gain may delay the consolidation of representative democracy in Russia for an indefinite time and eventually lead to a new level of economic stagnation and a return to authoritarianism.
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December 1998
Research Article|
December 01 1998
Manifestations of Delegative Democracy in Russian Local Politics: What Does It Mean for the Future of Russia?
Andrei Tsygankov
Andrei Tsygankov
School of International Relations, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA. Tel: 1-818-956-7950; E-mail: [email protected]
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Communist and Post-Communist Studies (1998) 31 (4): 329–344.
Citation
Andrei Tsygankov; Manifestations of Delegative Democracy in Russian Local Politics: What Does It Mean for the Future of Russia?. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 December 1998; 31 (4): 329–344. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-067X(98)00015-4
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