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Three dilemmas of hybrid regime governance: Russia from Putin to Putin
Authors:Nikolay Petrov  Maria Lipman
Affiliation:1. Department of Political Science, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia;2. Society Program, Carnegie Moscow Center, Moscow, Russia
Abstract:This article investigates how hybrid regimes supply governance by examining a series of dilemmas (involving elections, the mass media, and state institutions) that their rulers face. The authors demonstrate how regime responses to these dilemmas – typically efforts to maintain control while avoiding outright repression and societal backlash – have negative outcomes, including a weakening of formal institutions, proliferation of “substitutions” (e.g., substitutes for institutions), and increasing centralization and personalization of control. Efforts by Russian leaders to disengage society from the sphere of decision-making entail a significant risk of systemic breakdown in unexpected ways. More specifically, given significantly weakened institutions for interest representation and negotiated compromise, policy-making in the Russian system often amounts to the leadership's best guess (ad hoc manual policy adjustments) as to precisely what society will accept and what it will not, with a significant possibility of miscalculation. Three case studies of the policy-making process are presented: the 2005 cash-for-benefits reform, plans for the development of the Khimki Forest, and changes leading up to and following major public protests in 2011–2012.
Keywords:hybrid regimes  Russia  elections  mass media  state  governance  democracy  authoritarianism  cash-for-benefits reform  Khimki Forest  public protest  substitution
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