Lexington Books
Pages: 200
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-0359-3 • Paperback • April 2002 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
Subjects: Education / Finance,
Education / Educational Policy & Reform / General,
History / General,
History / Europe / General,
History / Europe / Eastern,
History / Europe / Russia & the Former Soviet Union,
Political Science / Civics & Citizenship,
Political Science / History & Theory,
Political Science / Civil Rights,
Political Science / Political Ideologies / Democracy,
Political Science / Political Process / General,
Religion / Christianity / Orthodox
Christopher Marsh is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Baylor University. He is the author of Russia at the Polls (2001) and Making Russian Democracy Work: Social Capital, Economic Development, and Democratization (2000). Nikolas K. Gvosdev is Assistant Professor of Church-State Studies at Baylor University. He is the author of Imperial Policies and Perspectives towards Georgia, 1760-1819 (2000) and Reconciling Orthodox Tradition with Modern Democracy (2000).
Chapter 1 Introduction: Civil Society and Russia's Elusive Search for Justice: Concepts, Traditions, and Contemporary Issues
Part 2 Lessons from History and Culture
Chapter 3 Revisiting the Russian "Constrained Autocracy": "Absolutism" and Natural Rights Theories in Russia and the West
Chapter 4 A Russian Model of Development: What Novgorod Can Teach the West
Part 5 Freedom of Religion and Civil Society
Chapter 6 Nationalism and Religion in Russian Civil Society: An Inquiry into the 1997 Law "On Freedom of Conscience"
Chapter 7 "Managed Pluralism" and Civil Religion in Post-Soviet Russia
Part 8 The Role of Media and Education
Chapter 9 The Russian Press and Civil Society: Freedom of Speech vs. Freedom of Market
Chapter 10 The Independent Press in Russia: Integrity and the Economics of Survival
Chapter 11 Higher Education and Russia's Dual Transition: Inequality, Inefficency, and Social Justice
Part 12 Marginalized Voices in Civil Society
Chapter 13 Ethnic and Religious Minorities and their Search for Justice: The Case of Chechnya
Chapter 14 Women's Experiences of Justice and Injustice in Russia
This is an exciting and timely collection that brings together historical, social scientific, cultural, and journalisitc perspectives on the nature of civil society and its problems and possibilities in contemporary Russia. . . . The authors fulfill their promise by uncovering deep connections between civil society and the idea of "justice."
— Daniel Orlovsky, Southern Methodist University
Christopher Marsh and Nikolas Gvosdev have put together a volume that provides a unique perspective on oft-neglected aspects of civil society in Russia. It should help to provoke debate and discussion of important issues among those studying Russia's rapidly changing social and cultural landscape.
— Harley D. Balzer, Georgetown University
Because of its range of topics and the unique perspective which binds them together, this collection is a thought-provoking, much-needed contribution to, among others, the fields of political science and post-Soviet studies.
— Journal of Church and State
Provides a glimpse at important dimensions of the terrain and debates about the complex relationship between civil society and the search for justice.
— Katherine O'Sullivan See, James Madison College; Slavic Review
This volume offers a stimulating and hard-hitting look at the crucial question of civil society—and its absence—in post-Soviet Russia. Virtually all other questions about what's happening there and what will happen in the future—democracy, pluralism, economic reform, and behavior toward neighbors—all depend on the outcome of issues probed here.
— Strobe Talbott, president, The Brookings Institution