ABSTRACT

Since the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia's party system has suffered a difficult and turbulent infancy. Moscow based parties have had only very limited territorial penetration, and fragmentation has been one of its most significant features.
Based on extensive fieldwork in three Russian regions, this book examines the development of the country's party system and the role played by parties in regional politics. Using a comparative approach, it scrutinises the internal structures and activities of the parties, looks at their decision-making processes, their everyday party life, the activities of party members, and the role of regional party organisations in federal and local election campaigns.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

The rationale of the present study

chapter 2|24 pages

Political parties in Russia

The federal level

chapter 3|21 pages

Politics and parties in the regions

chapter 4|30 pages

Party organizations

Federal, regional, local

chapter 5|22 pages

The membership

chapter 6|24 pages

Parties and elections in the middle Volga

chapter 7|12 pages

Russian party development in perspective