Simon Pirani investigates the interaction of power, money and people in Russia during the presidencies of Vladimir Putin and his successor Dmitry Medvedev.
Profiling the Putin team, including contingents from the security services and pro-market economic reformers , Pirani argues that the economic growth it presided over during the oil boom was one-sided. The gap between rich and poor widened. Now the boom is over, inequalities will multiply further. As well as explaining Russia's economic trajectory, the book provides a unique account of the social movements that are working against an increasingly authoritarian government to change Russia for the better.
This is the perfect introduction for undergraduates approaching Russia for the first time and those who wish to know how Russia will change during the economic crisis.
Simon Piraniis author of The Russian Revolution in Retreat, 1920-24: Soviet Workers and the New Communist Elite (2008), and of books and articles on post-Soviet Russia and Ukraine. He is a journalist with a lifelong commitment to the labour movement, and a former editor of the British miners' union journal. He is currently senior research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies and co-author of Russian and CIS Gas Markets and Their Impact on Europe (2009).
List of figures and tables
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Putin's Russia in Deep Focus
1. From Gorbachev to Yeltsin
2. From Yeltsin to Putin
3. Power and money: the economic foundations
4. Power and money: the state, oligarchs and oil
5. Power and money: from oil boom to bust
6. Power and people: how Russia is ruled
7. People and money: human development dilemmas
8. People: parties, unions and NGOs
9. People: grass-roots movements
Conclusions
Chronology
Glossary of Russian words and abbreviations
Further reading
Index