Pikalyovo and the Reverse Connection
Robert Amsterdam (September 7th, 2009) Writes:
Andrew Wilson of the European Council on Foreign Relations has a piece on Transitions Online which takes a look at some opinions of Gleb Pavlovsky and Yevgeny Gontmahker to debate what the Pikalyovo incident did and did not teach us about politics in Russia.Pikalyovo was also an attempt to address the inefficiencies in Putin's authoritarian project by creating what Russians call obratnaya sviaz
("reverse connection"). The system works, but only just. Russia still
needs a modernization project, albeit not the "prosperity project,"
backed by good finances and sound macroeconomics, which the
Putin-Medvedev tandem was originally supposed to implement. Not only
will Russia have to proceed with fewer resources, it will have to
tackle the flip side of a stronger state, what even Pavlovsky calls
"severe monopolism in all social spheres," not just in government and
the economy, but in the mass media and in society at ...
Tags for this Post:
Andrew Wilson, Bank, chief, European Council on Foreign Relations, Gleb Pavlovsky;, Gontmakher Yurgens, head, Igor Yurgens, Institute of Contemporary Development, Khrushchev, Kremlin;, Liberal Party, mass media, oil price recovery, Putin, Russia, Russia, Stalin;, United Russia, Vladislav Surkov, Yevgeny Gontmahker
Andrew Wilson, Bank, chief, European Council on Foreign Relations, Gleb Pavlovsky;, Gontmakher Yurgens, head, Igor Yurgens, Institute of Contemporary Development, Khrushchev, Kremlin;, Liberal Party, mass media, oil price recovery, Putin, Russia, Russia, Stalin;, United Russia, Vladislav Surkov, Yevgeny Gontmahker


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