Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-257) and index
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Center and regions in Russia -- Fiscal transfers and fiscal appeasement -- Public spending and regional voting -- Political strategies of regional governors -- Yugoslavia, the USSR, Czechoslovakia, and Russia -- Conclusion: democratization and political integration
0
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"After the Deluge offers a new, provocative interpretation of Russia's struggle in the 1990s to construct a democratic system of government in the largest and most geographically divided country in the world. The Russian Federation that emerged from the Soviet Union faced dissolution as the leaders of Russia's constituent units in the early 1990s defied Moscow's authority, declared sovereign states on their territory, refused to remit taxes, and even adopted national constitutions, flags, and anthems. Yet, by mid-decade, a fragile equilibrium had emerged out of the apparently chaotic brinkmanship of central and regional officials."--Jacket
Text of Note
"Based on extensive statistical analysis of previously unpublished data as well as interviews with numerous central and regional policymakers, After the Deluge suggests an original and counterintuitive interpretation of this experience."--BOOK JACKET. "After the Deluge will appeal to a broad audience of scholars in political science, economics, history, geography, and policy studies."--Jacket
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
After the deluge.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Central-local government relations-- Russia (Federation)
Federal government-- Russia (Federation)
GEOGRAPHICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Russia (Federation), Politics and government, 1991-