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Book
Local politics and democratization in Russia
Author:
ISBN: 9780415590303 9780415336543 9780203891513 0415590302 0415336546 0203891511 9781134075522 9781134075560 9781134075577 9780415437028 9780415590181 9780203891452 9781134327386 9781134327423 9781134327430 Year: 2009 Publisher: London ; New York : Routledge,


Book
Misinterpreting Modern Russia : western views of Putin and his presidency
Author:
ISBN: 9780826427724 0826427723 1501300563 1441101543 9781441101549 1322085900 9781322085906 9781441106797 1441103325 9781441103321 9781501300561 Year: 2009 Publisher: New York : Continuum,

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Abstract

"When President Vladimir Putin ascended to the Kremlin at the end of the 1990s, he had to struggle with the after-effects of Boris Yeltsin's political agenda: outrageous corruption, endless social injustice, and deeply entrenched interests dating back to Gorbachev and beyond. From the outset, Putin saw his task as leveling out the political scenery. Discontent had been building up among ordinary Russians on these consequences of the dramatically unstable 1990s. Stabilization of the political system and cleaning up the widespread corruption were Putin's aims, and the Russian people supported him wholeheartedly. Many observers in the West were quick to condemn Putin and depict him as an authoritarian, dishonest leader who was still linked to the KGB. When asked why Russians were supporting the new Kremlin, many experts explained that it was a paradox that combined the country's supposed history of tyranny and its people's inclination towards it. These explanations shaped the West's understanding of modern Russia and they appear to be unshakeable in cultural circles today. Bruno Sergi argues, in this new study, that the way to know the complete story behind how Putin's presidency has been viewed in Russia, is to examine closely the hard realities that conditioned Putin's policies and responses. Misinterpreting Modern Russia: Western Views of Putin and his Presidency looks beyond the stereotypes to the hard logic of the 1990s, and asks a range of provocative questions about the disintegration of the old Soviet empire and the extraordinary riches that have caused so much opportunity and turmoil in recent years."--Bloomsbury Publishing.

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