Political Opposition in Russia: a Vanishing Species?

Political Opposition in Russia:
a Vanishing Species?


Gelman V.Ya.,

Cand. Sci. (Pol. Sci.), Prof., Faculty of Political Sciences and Sociology, European University at St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg, Russia, gelman@eu.spb.ru



DOI: 10.17976/jpps/2004.04.04

For citation:

Gelman V.Ya. Political Opposition in Russia: a Vanishing Species? – Polis. Political Studies. 2004. No. 4. https://doi.org/10.17976/jpps/2004.04.04



Abstract

In the article, reasons are analyzed, of the defeat sustained during the 2003 to 2004 electoral cycle by all political forces that had been claiming, to this or that extent, the role of opposition to the political regime or to the political course pursued by the President and by the government. According to the author’s conclusion, this defeat was caused not so much by situational factors related to the popularity of the country’s President, to the organizational weakness of opposition parties, or to any particular characteristics of the election campaign, as, rather, by the character of the current political regime, above all by the impact of institutional factors unfavourable for the opposition, as well as by the after-effects of the elites’ consolidation on the basis of the “imposed consensus” principle. Under these circumstances, the author argues, any strategies of the opposition forces turned inefficient and were leading either to marginalization, or to co-optation to the ruling group with no substantial political consequences. The author relates eventual fair chances for the appearance and success of new opposition, to prospects of a next split of elites with, at that, the “zero sum game” principle to be given up when solving intra-elite conflicts.


Content No. 4, 2004

See also:


Peregudov S.P.,
Transnational Corporations on the Way to Corporate Citizenship. – Polis. Political Studies. 2004. No3

Fyodorov K.G.,
The Policy in the Sphere of Local Taxation in Russia. – Polis. Political Studies. 2003. No4

Peregudov S.P.,
Corporate Capital and Power Institutions: Who Plays the Master?. – Polis. Political Studies. 2002. No5

Kazantzev A.A.,
Intelligentsia and Structural Innovations in Political Expanse (An Essay of Comparative Analysis). – Polis. Political Studies. 2007. No1

Sergeev V.M.,
How Are Social Changes Possible? (Prolegomena to a Statistical Theory of Social Networks). – Polis. Political Studies. 2001. No6

 

   

Introducing an article



Polis. Political Studies
4 2005


Feldman D.M.
Political Interaction of the CIS Countries’ Elites

 The article text
 

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