Growing Pains: Russian Democracy and the Election of 1993

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Timothy J. Colton, Jerry F. Hough
Brookings Institution Press, Dec 1, 2010 - Political Science - 766 pages

The Russian Federation on December 12, 1993, held its first national election since the collapse of Soviet Communism. The election, to a new, two-chamber parliament, was accompanied by a constitutional referendum. It followed months of wrangling over political and economic reform and a violent showdown in Moscow between President Boris Yeltsin and his opponents. After a bitter campaign in which the government frequently changed the rules of the game, Russians narrowly endorsed Yeltsin's draft constitution, but turned out in large numbers for nationalistic and socialistic opposition parties, leaving Russia's Choice, the party favored by the president, with a small minority of the seats. The contest, with its deeply contradictory results, was a watershed in the evolution of Russia's fledgling democracy. Growing Pains is a detailed study of the 1993 election and of its implications for Russian development and for the country's relations with the West. Several chapters, relying on comprehensive surveys of the Russian electorate, analyze the election process and how social structure and citizen opinions shaped voter choice. Others examine the campaigns of the major parties, the nature and consequences of electoral rules, and the roles of the mass media. Still others examine the campaign and its outcome at the grassroots in ten regions of Russia, from the western provinces to the Pacific coast, demonstrating the significance of local context and local elites and power structures in Russia's transitional politics.

 

Contents

The 1993 Election
1
Institutional Rules and Party Formation
37
Determinants of the Party Vote
75
The Perils of Revolutionary
115
The Moderate Reformist
141
Right and Left in the Hard Opposition
177
Television and the Campaign
211
Comprehensive
237
Mixed Results in a Hotbed
397
The Dual Structure
431
Political Ambition Elite Competition
463
A Preserve of Communism
491
Liberals Populists and Labor
533
Local Politics and a Coalition for Reform
567
The Logic of Ethnic Machine
599
Elite Bargaining and Ethnic Separatism
637

The Mass Media and the Electorate
267
Public Opinion and the Constitutional Referendum
291
The Election in
349
The Failure of Party Formation and
669
Contributors 000
713
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About the author (2010)

Timothy J. Colton is professor of government and Russian studies in the Department of Government and director of the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard University. His previous books include Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis (Harvard, 1995), named best book in government and political science 1995 by the Association of American Publishers. Jerry F. Hough is professor of political science and public policy at and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. His books include Democratization and Revolution in the USSR, 1985-1991 (Brookings, 1997) and Russia and the West: Gorbachev and Reform (Simon and Schuster, 1988; rev. 1990).

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