Constitution, Authoritarianism, and Bad Governance : The Case of Russia

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http://hdl.handle.net/10138/331926

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Gel'man , V 2021 , ' Constitution, Authoritarianism, and Bad Governance : The Case of Russia ' , Russian Politics , vol. 6 , no. 1 , pp. 71-90 . https://doi.org/10.30965/24518921-00601005

Title: Constitution, Authoritarianism, and Bad Governance : The Case of Russia
Author: Gel'man, Vladimir
Contributor organization: Russian and Eurasian Studies (Aleksanteri Institute)
Date: 2021-03
Language: eng
Number of pages: 20
Belongs to series: Russian Politics
ISSN: 2451-8921
DOI: https://doi.org/10.30965/24518921-00601005
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/331926
Abstract: Among many arguments for constitutional changes presented in the wake of the 2020 campaign for the popular vote in Russia, there was the idea that "cementing" Russia's political landscape for the sake of the regime's durability would serve as a tool for improvement of quality of governance. This argument, in a way, followed the essential point of Mancur Olson describing many autocrats across the globe as "roving bandits" with their short-term time horizons and incentives for predatory behavior. To what extent may the constitutional extension of the time horizon of Russia's authoritarian regime contribute to conversion of Russia's state officials and top managers from the "roving" to the "stationary" model, in Olson's terms? On the basis of previous research, I argue that the nature of Russia's political regime-electoral authoritarianism under personalist rule-prevents such a trajectory of further evolution. Indeed, the set of constitutional changes adopted in Russia in July 2020 is likely to preserve bad governance as a mechanism of maintenance of politico-economic order, as intentionally built and developed during the post-Soviet period. While certain technocratic solutions for Russia's governance, aimed at "fool-proofing", may avert the risks of major disasters, under conditions of durable authoritarianism the use of these devices will not result in major advancements in the quality of governance. Rather, they may contribute to further decay and aggravation of the numerous vices of bad governance.
Subject: 5171 Political Science
Russia
constitutional changes
personalist regime
authoritarianism
bad governance
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: unspecified
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: acceptedVersion


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