ABSTRACT

This book challenges the common perception of authoritarian regimes as incompatible with federalism and decentralization. It examines how the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan have managed to exploit federalism and decentralization as useful instruments to help them preserve control, avoid political instability, and to shift blame to the regional authorities in times of crises and policy failures. The authors explain how post-Soviet authoritarian regimes balance the advantages and risks and emphasize the contradictory role of external influences and threats to the institutional design of federalism and decentralization. Advancing our understanding of how the institutions of federalism and decentralization are skillfully constrained, but at the same time used by authoritarian incumbents, they show that federalism and decentralization matter in non-democracies, though the nondemocratic character of the political systems greatly modifies their effects. The authors show the implication of the COVID-19 crisis and current Russian war against Ukraine for the center-regional relations in Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of post-Soviet politics, decentralization, federalism, and modern authoritarianism.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

part I|74 pages

Theoretical Preliminaries

chapter 241|20 pages

Navigating Personalistic Regimes

The Role of Center-Regional Relations

chapter 3|19 pages

The Double-Edged Sword of External Factors

part II|76 pages

Between Democracy and Autocracy: Federalism and Decentralization Dynamics in the Post-Soviet States

chapter 985|22 pages

Russia

chapter 6|26 pages

Kazakhstan

chapter 7|26 pages

Ukraine

part III|53 pages

Responding to the COVID-19 Pandemic and the War