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Russia as a network state = what wor...
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Palgrave Connect (Online service)
Russia as a network state = what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Russia as a network state/ edited by Vadim Kononenko, Arkady Moshes.
Reminder of title:
what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /
other author:
Kononenko, Vadim.
Published:
Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ;Palgrave Macmillan, : 2011.,
Description:
1 online resource.
Notes:
Includes index.
Subject:
Public administration - Russia (Federation) -
Subject:
Russia (Federation) - Fiction. -
Online resource:
An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
ISBN:
9780230306707 (electronic bk.)
Russia as a network state = what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /
Russia as a network state
what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /[electronic resource] :edited by Vadim Kononenko, Arkady Moshes. - Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ;Palgrave Macmillan,2011. - 1 online resource.
Includes index.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction; V. Kononenko -- The Formation of Russia's Network Directorate; O. Kryshtanovskaya & S. White -- Can Medvedev Change Sistema? Informal Networks and Public Administration in Russia; A. Ledeneva -- Crooked Hierarchy and Reshuffled Networks: Reforming Russia's Dysfunctional Military Machine; P. Baev -- Who's running Russia's regions?; N. Petrov -- Networks, Cronies and Business Plans: Business-State Relations in Russia; P. Hanson_ -- The Russian Network State as a Great Power; S. Ortmann -- Conclusions; V. Kononenko.
Russia as a Network State discusses the ambiguous nature of the state in Russia by focusing on elite networks and their role in policy processes. The seven chapters written by leading experts in the field examine the paradoxical dualism of state institutions and ruling networks - the Russian 'network state'. Examining Russia as a network state provides answers to why some key decisions are never implemented while others duly are, and why the Russian state continues to exist despite the systemic inefficiency of its institutions. A central argument in the book is€that tracing the nodes and connections within ruling networks can make the analysis of state policies more comprehendible. It is also a point about the way the state is approached in the post-Soviet context, whereby a tension between institutions and elites is always depicted, be it a 'transitologist' or 'neo-patrimonial' framework of analysis.
ISBN: 9780230306707 (electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 9786613124654
Source: 406447Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Topical Terms:
234542
Public administration
--Russia (Federation)Subjects--Geographical Terms:
93502
Russia (Federation)
--Fiction.Index Terms--Genre/Form:
96803
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: JN6695 / .R863 2011
Dewey Class. No.: 302.30947
Russia as a network state = what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /
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[electronic resource] :
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what works in Russia when state institutions do not? /
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edited by Vadim Kononenko, Arkady Moshes.
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Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction; V. Kononenko -- The Formation of Russia's Network Directorate; O. Kryshtanovskaya & S. White -- Can Medvedev Change Sistema? Informal Networks and Public Administration in Russia; A. Ledeneva -- Crooked Hierarchy and Reshuffled Networks: Reforming Russia's Dysfunctional Military Machine; P. Baev -- Who's running Russia's regions?; N. Petrov -- Networks, Cronies and Business Plans: Business-State Relations in Russia; P. Hanson_ -- The Russian Network State as a Great Power; S. Ortmann -- Conclusions; V. Kononenko.
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Russia as a Network State discusses the ambiguous nature of the state in Russia by focusing on elite networks and their role in policy processes. The seven chapters written by leading experts in the field examine the paradoxical dualism of state institutions and ruling networks - the Russian 'network state'. Examining Russia as a network state provides answers to why some key decisions are never implemented while others duly are, and why the Russian state continues to exist despite the systemic inefficiency of its institutions. A central argument in the book is€that tracing the nodes and connections within ruling networks can make the analysis of state policies more comprehendible. It is also a point about the way the state is approached in the post-Soviet context, whereby a tension between institutions and elites is always depicted, be it a 'transitologist' or 'neo-patrimonial' framework of analysis.
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