Transcript Russia

Russia
2nd Period
Thomas Moore
Luke Weir
Shadman Uddin
Avery Lane
Andrew Zack
Introduction
Geography
• Capital City: Moscow
• Population: Approximately 142 million people
• Size: Approximately 17,075,200 square kilometers
Saint Basil’s Cathedral - Red Square, Moscow
(now a museum)
The Levels of Government
•Federal State with a republican form of
government
• Under constitution of December 1993
The Executive Branch
• Formal Powers
• Ability to issue decrees and directives without legislative
review
• Must not interfere with or go against any standing laws
• Prerogative to schedule referendums
• Promulgate federal laws
• Veto Legislation
• Appoint the Prime Minister
• Submits candidates for procurator general (Chief law
enforcement officer), for justices of the Constitutional
Court, the Supreme Court, federal district courts, and the
Superior Court of Arbitration
The Executive Branch
• The Government (Cabinet)
• Composed of the Premier or the Chair of the
Government
• The Deputies
• Ministers
• Presidential Administration
• Provides staff and policy support to President
• Drafts Presidential Decrees
• Coordinates policy among government agencies
• Security Council (Military Affiliated)
President
Vladimir
Vladimirovich
Putin
Prime Minister
Dmitry
Medvedev
Grand Kremlin Palace, Moscow - Home of
President
The Legislative Branch
• State (National) Legislature
• Two-House Legislature: The Federation Council and
The State Duma
The State Duma
• 450 deputies
• Powers of the Duma:
• Confirms the appointment of the prime
minister
• No-confidence vote
The Federation Council
• 178 deputies (2 from each of Russia’s 89 regions)
• Powers of the Federation Council
• Deals mostly with issues of subnational jurisdiction
like adjustments to internal borders
• Responsible for Confirming and Removing the
Procurator General and confirming justices of the
Constitutional Court
• Has final decision if Duma recommends removing
the president from office
• ALL BILLS PROPOSED TO THE FEDERATION
COUNCIL MUST BE FIRST CONSIDERED BY THE
STATE DUMA
Regional Legislatures
• Originally, each of the 89 regions elected both local governors and
legislatures
The Legislative Process
• Bills (draft laws) may originate from a number of
sources
• Over half of the full State Duma must adopt the draft
• Considered by the Federation Council
• Has 14 days to place on calendar
• Conciliation Commissions work out differences in the
legislation between two chambers
• President can veto
• 2/3 of the members must vote to override
White House - Home of Parliament until the
1993 Constitutional Crisis
Political Parties
• 78 registered political parties; 4 represented in Russian
Legislature
• A Just Russia
• Nikolai Levichev
• Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF)
• Gennadiy Zyuganov
• Liberal Democratic Party of Russian
• Vladimir Zhirinovskiy
• United Russia
• Dmitry Medvedev
The Judicial System
• Courts (including supreme courts and Constitutional
courts) have independent review, but ultimately no
influence on Government and practices
• Judges are appointed by the Federation Council, and
serve for life.
• There is no usage of precedent, as used in common
law legal systems
Ethnic Groups and Languages
• Russia has 160 ethnic groups which speak some 100 languages
• 142.6 million people speak Russian (Official language)
• 5.3 million speak Tatar
• 1.8 million speak Ukrainian
Russia’s Citizens, its Society,
and tha State
Luke Weir’s part of this huge fucking project; good lord this is brutal and somewhat lazy of Mr. Rumble when you consider the fact that we’ve been assigned to do exactly what he always does anyways.
Political Culture
• Political Values:
• Egalitarianism and collectivism
• General support for liberal democratic
values
• Desire for strong political leadership
• Public Opinion Towards Authority:
• Glasnost (1985-1990)
• Much resentment towards the government
Public Opinion Polls
More Public Opinion
Political Socialization
• Agents of Socialization:
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School
Family
Religion
The media
Political parties:
Patriarch Kirill: not a friend of
gay Russians
(Political?)
Cleavage
• Cleavages:
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Nationality
Religion
Social Class
Rural/Urban Division
• Effects
Role of the Media
• The media:
• biased
• About 52 journalists killed
since 1992
• Censorship:
• Article 29 of Russian
Constitution
• Russia is 140th out of 178
countries in Reporters
without Borders rankings of
press freedom
Political
Participation
• Typical examples:
• Voting
• Joining a nongovernment organization (NGO)
• Protest
• Voting behavior:
• Between 60-70% turnout in federal elections
• Examples of political violence:
• 1999 Moscow apartment bombings
• 2004 School hostage crisis/tragedy/disaster/
Women and Minorities:
• Women’s role in politics
• Women are homemakers
• Minorities/other nationalities:
• ~80% of Russia is made of ethnic Russians
• Two biggest minorities, Tatars and Ukrainians, make up only
10% of populace combined
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCasua
AczKY
Pussy Riot
Political and Economic
Change
Transition Into a Democracy
• The Communists- Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev
Gorbachev and reform – perestroika, glasnost, demokratizatsiia, “New
Thinking”
• Yeltsin and The Russian Federation
Radical Market Reform, New Constitution, Dissolution of Russia
• Putin
Soft authoritarianism
Social Movements
• Chechnya independence movement
• Gay-rights movement (Controversy of Sochi Olympics)
• Revival of Russian nationalism
• Rise of the Muslim identity
• Women’s rights
Political Change
Democracy to Soft Authoritarian State
-Political centralization and Restriction on opposition
Causes of Change?
Results of Change?
Economic Changes
• Yeltsin and Shock Therapy
• Economic Downturn
-Temporary Solutions
• Putin’s first presidency and the economy
• Medvedev and Crisis of ‘08
- Temporary Solutions?
• Putin and the economy today
Political Economy
Dependence on Natural Gas
Insider privatization –
Second Wave of Privatization and the 90’s
Mafia and business oligarchs
Putin the Reformer
Mikhail KhodorkovsyCorruption-
Russia’s Citizens
• Effects of Market Reform
• Income Inequality
• Political Culture of Younger Generation
• New Issue –Birthrate, Poor Foreign Investment, Agricultural
Decline, Capital Flight
Global Context
Role with the Western World and Supranational Organizations
-IMF
WTO
Vulnerability to supply and demand markets
Political attitudes to foreign nations
-America
-Western Europe
-Eastern Europe
Future attitudes?
Major influences on policymaking and
implantation
• Interest groups have had relatively little influence in Russia due to its
very strong executive branch and the general lack of continuity in the
government.
Influence of supranational and international
institutions
• It holds a permanent seat (which grants it veto power) on the Security
Council of the United Nations (UN) that it gained after the Soviet
Union dissolved and lost it’s seat.
• Russia is an active member of numerous UN system organizations
• Russia is not a part of the European Union and there are not currently
any notable plans to change that fact.
Putin and the world
• Putin has criticized a number of countries and their leadership during
his tenure as Russia’s chief leader and said the United States is prone
to "almost uncontained hyper use of force in international relations“.
• Tensions between Putin and American high leadership have been
tense over the past year due to the recent controversy surrounding
former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and the asylum that Putin
and Russia granted him and arguments over foreign policy having to
do with Syria and Iran.
Economic performance
• Russia has a market economy and the eighth largest economy in
the world by GDP
• The income tax being a flat tax on individuals of about thirteen
percent (This policy was instituted in 2001 to create a simpler tax
code).
• Oil, natural gas, metals, and timber products account for the
overwhelming majority of Russia’s exports and these allowed
them to pay off most of their national debt in 2006 leaving them
one as having one of the lowest amounts of debt to foreign
powers for a major country.
Social Welfare
• The 1993 constitution directly states that “The Russian Federation is a
social State whose policy is aimed at creating conditions for a worthy
life and a free development of man” and is one of the few countries
to directly establish itself as this.
• There is no minimum wage in Russia but instead there is a statutory
minimum wage that is less than three fourths of the monthly
minimum to be counted as being above the poverty line.
Civil liberties, rights,
and freedoms
• Protest strikes against government economic and social policy,
solidarity strikes, and strikes to demand union recognition are illegal
in Russia and protests in general are usually contained or stopped by
the government before.
• Starting at the end of 2011 and stretching into 2013, a large scale
protest broke out across the country; this protest ended
inconclusively.
Environment
• Russia is the largest country in the world
• The country spans nine different time zones.
• Russia is primarily subarctic in temperature but there are a few areas
prone to extremely high temperatures such as the coastal areas that
border the Black Sea or the Indian Ocean.
• There is a large diversity of animals.
Population and migration/immigration
• Ha population of a mere one hundred and forty three million people
and is only beginning to recover from the disarray and death that the
collapse of the Soviet Union brought upon the nation.
• The country experienced it’s greatest number of births since the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in 2009 and they topped that number
in 2012.
• In 2006 immigration laws were restructured
Terrorism
• The two most notable incidents of terrorism in the history of the
Russian federation are the 1999 Russian apartment bombings in
which almost 300 people were killed in primarily Moscow and was
partially responsible for the start of the Second Chechen War and
there is Moscow theater hostage crisis of 2002 where approximately
forty Chechens took over eight hundred Russians hostage and the
Russian government was able to kill all of the terrorists but in the
process was responsible for the deaths of over a hundred hostages
due to the use of a poisonous gas.
Corruption
• Russia is noted as being among the most corrupt countries in the
world and the second most corrupt country in Europe (after Ukraine)
according to the Corruptions Perceptions Index.
• The fall of The Soviet Union led to a massive amount of corruption
popping up in the country to fill the void left by the government and
both violent crime and organized gangs rose in number and influence.