2008
DOI: 10.1080/13523270802267872
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The Virtuous Circles of Western Exposure in Russian Regions: A Case for Micro-Polity Analysis of Democratic Change

Abstract: The thirtieth anniversary of the fall of communism and the onset of democratisation across Eastern Europe and parts of the former Soviet Union represents a significant milestone. Democratic institutions and processes have now had sufficient time to mature, stagnate, degenerate, or be dismantled. Three decades provide sufficient time for fine-grained comparative analysis of post-communist countries. A decade or so ago, from the perspective of Orbán's Hungary or Kaczyński's Poland, the distinction between 'East'… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Despite Putin's recentralisation reforms-which had the effect of undermining political pluralism in the hitherto more democratic regions-, we observe intertemporal continuity in the reproduction of regional patterns of electoral malpractice. In what dovetails with earlier research, we find that these variations are in turn to a certain extent conditioned by variables like levels of regional modernization and specifically education (Hale 2007;Lankina 2012Lankina , 2016Lankina and Getachew 2008;Saikkonen 2015). Despite the Kremlin's protestations to the effect that fawning governors in some regions are simply "trying too hard" to please the national regime in delivering implausibly high results, our analysis is more suggestive of the fact that fraud and other irregularities are perpetrated where regional authorities feel that they can get away with them and where they possess significant levers of influence over citizens.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…Despite Putin's recentralisation reforms-which had the effect of undermining political pluralism in the hitherto more democratic regions-, we observe intertemporal continuity in the reproduction of regional patterns of electoral malpractice. In what dovetails with earlier research, we find that these variations are in turn to a certain extent conditioned by variables like levels of regional modernization and specifically education (Hale 2007;Lankina 2012Lankina , 2016Lankina and Getachew 2008;Saikkonen 2015). Despite the Kremlin's protestations to the effect that fawning governors in some regions are simply "trying too hard" to please the national regime in delivering implausibly high results, our analysis is more suggestive of the fact that fraud and other irregularities are perpetrated where regional authorities feel that they can get away with them and where they possess significant levers of influence over citizens.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…In light of the above conflicting logics of arguments about citizens' potential responses to fraud, we advance the following hypotheses: HY1: Sub-national fraud will have no independent effect on the intensity of mass postelectoral protest HY2: Sub-national fraud will positively affect the intensity of mass post-electoral protest HY3: Sub-national fraud will negatively affect the intensity of mass post-electoral protest While testing for HY1-HY3, it is important to control for other factors and variables conventionally employed in analyses of regional democratic variations, particularly in territorially-large countries like Russia. Scholarship on federalism and decentralization has highlighted the spatially uneven nature of democratic governance in many settings (Fox 1994; Gel'man and Ross 2010; Gerring and Thacker 2004;Gervasoni 2010;Getachew 2006, 2012;Lankina, Libman et al 2016a, 2016bLankina and Getachew 2008;Putnam 1993;Snyder 2001). Pockets of sub-national authoritarianism may coexist with national democratic governance, and sub-national localities may display far greater degrees of political openness and competition than does a national regime.…”
Section: How Likely Are Citizens To Protest Against Locally-perpetratmentioning
confidence: 99%