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This 8 page paper provides an answer to the question of whether the oligarchs are likely to be a force for democracy in Russia. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHRusOli.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
movement towards a democratic structure has said to be the result of Western influences. At the same time, democracy has been supported by the wealthiest of Russian politicians and
it can be argued that this has occurred as a result of the perceived ease through which the democratic process seems to support individual gains. In determining an answer
to this question, then, it is necessary to assess the changing political process in Russia, the emergency of democratic principles, their application without a structure, and the institutions that have
supported continued oligarchic control. Background The question of the oligarchic support for democracy in Russia stems from the transformation of the Russian political process after the fall of
the Soviet Union and the introduction of the Russian federal state (Hahn, 2003). Theorists have argued that the success or failure of Russias change into a stable market democracy
will have a major impact on the stability of Europe and Asia (Hahn, 2003). As a result, many have watched the events in Russia in recent years with trepidation,
and have struggled to understand the shifting political perspectives and the impacts of the wealthy Russian oligarchs (Hahn, 2003). "Only a democratic federal system can hold together and effectively
manage Russias vast territory, the awkward administrative structure inherited from the failed USSR, and hundreds of divergent ethnic, linguistic, and religious interests. Dissolution or even any further weakening of Russias
federal state could have dire consequences for Russian national and international security by weakening control over its means of mass destruction" (Hahn, 2003). What makes the situation in Russia interesting
is that the challenge faced by the emerging structure of the Russian government is that it is historically unprecedented. "No state of Russias size and complexity has ever needed
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