ABSTRACT

The young Russian men and women who record in these pages the hopes, fears, triumphs, and tragedies their country has undergone in recent years-altering their own lives profoundly in the process-all come from the first post-Soviet generation to achieve positions of leadership in Russia. They report on five challenges central to Russia's survival and stabilization: reshaping the state, coping with new economic rules, striving toward the rule of law, building a civil society, and preserving the national culture and educational capacity. They love their country, while understanding all too well the crippling psychological legacy of seventy years of a dictatorship that was both cunning and cruel in dispensing a plausible utopian myth and exacting extraordinary sacrifices in the name of that myth. They understand the acute sense of disorientation that overcame all generations when the USSR abruptly dissolved in 1991 and the Communist Party simultaneously lost much, if not all, of its power. As several of our authors recall, it was like waking up one morning and finding yourself a citizen of an entirely different country, meanwhile discovering that your parents were not your real parents and that you had acquired a brand new surname.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part One|72 pages

Reshaping the Russian State

chapter 1|23 pages

A New Russia — Or the Same Old Russia?

An Alternative Worldview in the Making

chapter 2|11 pages

Protecting Fair Competition in the New Russia

A Revolution in Thinking, Not Just Economics

chapter 3|22 pages

Reform in Russia's Regions

The View from Novgorod

part Two|64 pages

Coping with New Economic Rules

chapter 5|18 pages

The New Stage of Economic Reforms in Russia

Thoughts on Policy and Practice

chapter 6|8 pages

Building Houses for the Newly Affluent Near Moscow

An Entrepreneur's Perspective

chapter 9|17 pages

Transforming Russian Political Mores

The Key to Economic Evolution

part Three|47 pages

Striving Toward Rule of Law

chapter 10|17 pages

The Legal Profession and Civil Society in Russia

Problems and Prospects

chapter 12|19 pages

Where Society Must Rein In Government

Restorative Justice and Preservation of the Community

part Four|105 pages

Civil Society Building Blocks

chapter 13|9 pages

Nongovernmental Organizations

Building Blocks for Russia's Civil Society

chapter 14|10 pages

On the Path to a New Russia

The Youth Movement

chapter 15|23 pages

Empowering Russia's Women

Will Their Potential Be Tapped?

chapter 16|15 pages

Reviving the Russian Orthodox Church

A Task Both Theological and Secular

chapter 18|10 pages

What Future Awaits the Russian Press?

A Prognosis

chapter 19|16 pages

My Life, My Fate

Severiane and Russia's North

part Five|119 pages

Preserving the Culture, Modernizing Education

chapter 21|9 pages

A Sad Tale About a Happy Fate

chapter 23|20 pages

Experimenting with Liberal Education in Russia

The Break with Soviet-Era Conventions

chapter 25|20 pages

A Theater for Oneself

chapter 26|19 pages

Russia's Literary Revival

From Authoritarianism to Intellectual Freedom