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The Russian State

The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

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Page 1: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The Russian State

Page 2: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 3: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms –

not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian Empire in 1917

Formally, the USSR was a federation of 15 republics, each having a constitutional right to secede

Liberal reforms, undertaken by Mikhail Gorbachev, reduced the power of the Russian state in several ways: Reduced state control over the economy Reduced central control over regional (republic) governments Reduced state control over information (media) Reduced state control over individual citizens

It was a historic shift of power in Russia – a massive devolution of power from the top, which was expected to create a more rational, effective, modern political-economic system

Page 4: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

Revolution The devolution went out of control, and the system

collapsed. The products of the collapse: The unleashing of market forces, rapid and chaotic shift to

capitalism The creation of 15 independent nation-states on the basis of

the republics of the former USSR Most of the new states adopted liberal-democratic

constitutions Russia is the largest of the 15 states of the former Soviet

Union. It is a federal state, like the USSR, composed of 89 regions. But unlike the USSR, its constitution does not allow regions to secede

12 of the post-Soviet states have formed a loose Commonwealth of Independent States

Page 5: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

Victory or Defeat? Another empire fell – the people are free Triumph of democracy Opportunity to create new and better political-economic

systemsBUT ALSO: Disorganization of life, chaos due to collapse of central

authority Effects of “shock therapy” Absence of a strong legal system The bureaucracy has freat advantages in struggle for power

and property Weak civil society, lack of traditions of citizen independence,

individual responsibility Loss of Russia’s international influence

Page 6: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

Rebuilding a State Factors for democratic change:

Democracy is needed Market economy The state is weak

Factors for authoritarian continuity: Tradition Chaos The nomenklatura dominance Weakness of civil society

Page 7: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

HOW A STATE IS FORMED

The design The reality of interests and their clashes The external environment

THE REQUIREMENTS OF STATE-BUILDING

Territory - borders Identity – the ethnic factor, ideology Constitution – organization of the state Legitimacy – source of government authority Governance – effectiveness of policy, public support

Page 8: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The State Emblem of USSR

Page 9: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

                                                                                                                                                         

The State Emblem of the Russian Federation

Page 10: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The

President

The Constitutional

Court

The Federal Assembly

Federation Council

The State DumaGovernment of the Russian Federation,

headed by Prime Minister

JUDICIARY EXECUTIVE LEGISLATIVE

THE THREE BRANCHES OF RUSSIA’S FEDERAL AUTHORITY

Page 11: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 12: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The President Elected by direct popular vote once every 6 years (before

2012 – every 4 years) Must receive an absolute majority of the votes cast in an

election in which more than 50% of the eligible voters take part Powers:

Overall responsibility for the state and the Constitution Commander-in-Chief Appoints the Government, headed by Prime Minister (the PM’s

appointment is normally subject to Duma’s approval, but if it votes 3 times against the President’s appointee, the President can dissolve the Duma and call a new election)

Proposes legislation Signs bills into law May rule by decree (without parliamentary consent)

Page 13: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 14: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The Federal Assembly

Bicameral The State Duma (“duma” stands for “thought”,

“deliberation”) is elected by popular vote once every 4 years. 50% of the 450 seats are filled through the first-past-the-post method, 50% through proportional representation (voting for party lists)

The Federation Council represents each of the 83 regions of Russia (2 reps from each region); members are appointed by regional authorities

Page 15: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 16: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 17: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The State Duma

Originates legislation Approves the candidacy of the Prime Minister Approves the federal budget Ratifies international treaties Oversees the Executive Branch May impeach the President

Page 18: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The Federation Council (“the Senate”)

Consists of 178 members, each federation subject (republic, oblast, krai, etc.) represented by 2 members

Members are appointed by regional leaders Ratifies international treaties Shares with the President the power to:

declare war and state of emergency confirm border changes appoint and dismiss General Prosecutor, members of the

Constitutional Court and members of the Audit Chamber Shares with the Duma the power to impeach the President

Page 19: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 20: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian
Page 21: The Russian State. Devolution The Soviet Union collapsed in the process of liberal reforms – not as a result of a war, as happened with the Russian

The Constitutional Court

Has the power of constitutional oversight: may declare actions of government officials, including the President, illegal

Members are appointed by the President Chair of the Court is elected by a majority of the

Members of the Court