Lexington Books
Pages: 322
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-7178-4 • Hardback • November 2018 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-1-4985-7179-1 • eBook • November 2018 • $134.50 • (£104.00)
David Foley is associate professor of political science at Salem College.
Chapter One: Russian Government and Society
Chapter Two: Weaving the Fabric of the Russian Transition Experience
Chapter Three: The Legacy and Russia’s Region to Center Relationships
Chapter Four: The Emergence of Authoritarian Democracy
Chapter Five: The Federal Districting System and Duma Election Outcomes:
The Path to the Party of Power
Chapter Six: Asymmetric Patterns and Party List Outcomes: Selected Variables
Chapter Seven: Yeltsin’s Legacy and Putin’s Path to Centralized Federalism
Chapter Eight: The Future of Janus Russia and the Continuing Structural Legacy
Foley draws on an impressive range of relevant English-language sources in multiple disciplines. He is generous in citing and quoting from other scholars throughout the book. . . . This book brings together substantial information about Russian territorial governance prior to and, especially, during the 1990s and 2000s. Its most valuable contribution may be the discussion of why a system of territorial governance that had demonstrably contributed to the collapse of the Soviet state was nonetheless retained by Russian leaders in the years that followed. The Legacy Structure will be most accessible to advanced students and specialists in Russian history or politics who will be familiar with the many past and recent events referred to.— The Russian Review
David Foley examines the role of federalism in the failure of democracy to consolidate in post‐Soviet Russia. His core argument in The Legacy Structure of Russia’s One Hundred Year Transformation, which is a convincing one, is that the Russian Federation inherited the ethno‐territorial federal structure of the Soviet Union, which was ill‐suited to foster the democracy that Boris Yeltsin was ostensibly trying to build. The contradictory pressures in that ethno‐federal structure directly contributed to the collapse of the Soviet state in 1991. Foley hints that such a fate may also threaten the integrity of the Russian Federation, though he stops short of making any predictions along those lines.
— Political Science Quarterly
This book provides a masterful account of the legacy structuresinforming Russian statehood. . . . This volume can serve a wide readership, academic and non-academic alike. Students of both comparative politics and international relations will benefit from a persuasive account of systems governance, institutionalism, democracy and democratisation, internationalisation of system legacies, system decay and collapse, secessionism, amongst other key interests in the various sub-fields of political science. Given Russia’s territorial vastness and geopolitical significance, Foley’s volume notably contributes to our understanding of power rivalries in the Eurasian space.
— Europe-Asia Studies
An erudite and original analysis of Russia’s century-long transformation, with a focus on centre-periphery relations but informed by a profound understanding of the legacies of past attempts at change. An essential contribution to the study of contemporary Russia.— Richard Sakwa, Professor of Russian and European Politics, University of Kent
Foley effectively examines Russia’s current center-regional relations under Putin in light of its imperial and Soviet heritages. He argues that current social segmentations, power asymmetries and vertical power relations are reminiscent of the pre-1989 Soviet era. The Legacy Structure of Russia's One Hundred Year Transformation gains value by utilizing historical, qualitative and quantitative approaches. Foley demonstrates that only the center holds the Russian federal republic together. Although its populace identifies with a national concept of ‘Russia,’ they identify far more with their local and immediate surrounding communities. His book is well worth the read! — Claude Welch, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor, University of Buffalo, The State University of New York,