Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 240
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-0-8476-9509-6 • Paperback • November 1999 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
David Lane is reader in sociology and fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: The Evolution of the Post-Soviet Oil Industry
Chapter 3 Structure and Ownership
Chapter 4 Banks and the Financial Sector
Chapter 5 The Oil Elite: Background and Outlook
Chapter 6 Corruption and Crime in the Russian Oil Industry
Part 7 Part II: Russian Oil and the Regions
Chapter 8 Tiumen, Decentralization and Center-Periphery Tension
Chapter 9 Federalization and the West Siberian Oil and Gas Province
Part 10 Part III: International and Foreign Policy Implications
Chapter 11 Oil, Politics, and Foreign Policy
Chapter 12 Russian Interference in the Caspian Sea Region: Dplomacy Adrift
This revealing volume offers considerable insight from the perspective of the oil industry. . . . Well worth reading by all who might seek to understand the reasons behind the underperformance of the Russian economy and society during the 1990s.
— Slavic Review
For those seeking clues regarding the weak economic performance of Boris Eltsin's Russia, this revealing edited volume offers considerable insight from the perspective of the oil industry. Sociologists and political scientists in particular should find much value in this work. Economists and energy-sector business analysts will also read this book with great interest. Students, both graduate and undergraduate, and from many disciplines, will benefit from exposure to these quite readable and sensible contributions.
— Slavic Review
So much is played close to the chest in contemporary Russia that it is difficult to get information, let alone interpret it. The study that David Lane initiated and has editied is therefore particularly welcome. The players and their games are much clearer than they were. The whole book is a useful study. It is both informative and thought-provoking on its declared subject. It also contributes to a clearer understanding of Russian society in transition.
— Seer
The future of Russian oil is one of the most intriguing subjects in international oil affairs at the beginning of the new millennium.
— The Journal Of Energy Literature