Russia

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Российская Федерация
Rossiyskaya Federatsiya
Russian Federation
Flag of Russia Coat of arms of Russia
Flag Coat of arms
Anthem
Hymn of the Russian Federation
Location of Russia
Capital
(and largest city)
Moscow
55°45′N, 37°37′E
Official languages Russian official throughout nation; thirty others co-official in various regions
Government Semi-presidential
federal republic
 -  President Vladimir Putin
 -  Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov
Formation
 -  Declared June 12, 1990 
 -  Finalized December 25, 1991 
Area
 -  Total 17,075,400 km² (1st)
6,592,800 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 13
Population
 -  2006 estimate 142,754,000 (9th)
 -  2002 census 145,274,019 
 -  Density 8.3 /km² (209th)
21.8 /sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2006 estimate
 -  Total $1.727 trillion (8th1)
 -  Per capita $12,096 
GDP (nominal) 2006 estimate
 -  Total $979 billion (11th)
 -  Per capita $6,856 
Gini? (2002) 39.9 (medium
HDI (2004) 0.797 (medium) (65th)
Currency Ruble (RUB)
Time zone (UTC+2 to +12)
 -  Summer (DST)  (UTC+3 to +13)
Internet TLD .ru (.su reserved)
Calling code +7
1 Rank based on IMF April 2007 data.

Russia (Russian: Росси́я, Rossiya; pronounced [rʌ'sʲi.jə]), also[1] the Russian Federation (Росси́йская Федера́ция, Rossiyskaya Federatsiya; [rʌ'sʲi.skə.jə fʲɪ.dʲɪ'ra.ʦɪ.jə],(Russian language) listen ), is a transcontinental country extending over much of northern Eurasia (Asia and Europe). With an area of 17,075,400 km², Russia is the largest country in the world, covering almost twice the total area of the next-largest country, Canada, and has significant mineral and energy resources. Russia has the world's ninth-largest population. Russia shares land borders with the following countries (counter-clockwise from northwest to southeast): Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, and North Korea. It is also close to the United States (Alaska state), Sweden, and Japan across relatively small stretches of water (the Bering Strait, the Baltic Sea, and La Pérouse Strait, respectively).

Formerly the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR), a republic of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), Russia became the Russian Federation following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991. After the Soviet era, the area, population, and industrial production of the Soviet Union (then one of the world's two Cold War superpowers, the other superpower being the United States) that were located in Russia passed on to the Russian Federation.

After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the newly-independent Russian Federation emerged as a great power (although it is also considered to be an energy superpower).[2] Russia is considered the Soviet Union's successor state in diplomatic matters (see Russia's membership in the United Nations) and is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. It is also one of the five recognized nuclear weapons states and possesses the world's largest stockpile of weapons of mass destruction (see Russia and weapons of mass destruction). Russia is the leading nation of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a member of the G8 as well as other international organisations.

Contents

History

Main article: History of Russia

Ancient Russia

An approximative map of the cultures in European Russia at the arrival of the Varangians.
An approximative map of the cultures in European Russia at the arrival of the Varangians.

Prior to the first century, the vast lands of southern Russia were home to scattered tribes, such as Proto-Indo-Europeans and Scythians.[3] Between the third and sixth centuries, the steppes were overwhelmed by successive waves of nomadic invasions, led by warlike tribes which would often move on to Europe, as was the case with Huns and Turkish Avars.

During the period from fifth century BC to seventh century human settlements are represented by Dyakovo culture of Iron Age which occupies the significant part of the Upper Volga, Valday and Oka River area. Dyakovo culture was formed by Finno-Ugric peoples, ancestors of Merya, Muromian, Meshchera, Veps tribes. All regional Funno-Ugric toponymy and hydronym names go back to those languages, for example Yauza River which is a confluent of the Moskva River, and probably the Moskva River itself too.

A Turkic people, the Khazars, ruled southern Russia through the 8th century. They were important allies of the Byzantine Empire and waged a series of successful wars against the Arab caliphates. A statue of a Vedic god recently excavated in the Volga region points to a link to India around the ninth century.

Kievan Rus' in the 11th century.
Kievan Rus' in the 11th century.

In this era, the term "Rhos" or "Rus" first came to be applied to the Varangians and later also to the Slavs who peopled the region.[4] As well as one of the rulers who contributed to the name "rus". In the tenth to eleventh centuries this state of Kievan Rus became the largest in Europe and one of the most prosperous, due to diversified trade with both Europe and Asia. The opening of new trade routes with the Orient at the time of the Crusades contributed to the decline and fragmentation of Kievan Rus by the end of the twelfth century.

In the eleventh and twelfth centuries, the constant incursions of nomadic Turkish tribes, such as the Kipchaks and the Pechenegs, led to the massive migration of Slavic populations from the fertile south to the heavily forested regions of the north, known as Zalesye. The medieval states of Novgorod Republic and Vladimir-Suzdal emerged as successors to Kievan Rus on those territories, while the middle course of the Volga River came to be dominated by the Muslim state of Volga Bulgaria. Like many other parts of Eurasia, these territories were overrun by the Mongol invaders, who formed the state of Golden Horde which would pillage the Russian principalities for over three centuries. Later known as the Tatars, they ruled the southern and central expanses of present-day Russia, while the territories of present-day Ukraine and Belarus were incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Poland, thus dividing the Russian people in the north from the Belarusians and Ukrainians in the west.

Similarly to the Balkans, long-lasting nomadic rule retarded the country's economic and social development. However, the Novgorod Republic together with Pskov retained some degree of autonomy during the time of the Mongol yoke and was largely spared the atrocities that affected the rest of the country. Led by Alexander Nevsky, the Novgorodians repelled the Germanic crusaders who attempted to colonize the region.

Muscovy

Main article: Muscovy

Unlike its spiritual leader, the Byzantine Empire, Russia under the leadership of Moscow was able to revive and organise its own war of reconquest, finally subjugating its enemies and annexing their territories. After the fall of Constantinople in 1453, Muscovite Russia remained the only more or less functional Christian state on the Eastern European frontier, allowing it to claim succession to the legacy of the Eastern Roman Empire.

While still under the domain of the Mongol-Tatars and with their connivance, the duchy of Moscow began to assert its influence in Western Russia in the early fourteenth century. Assisted by the Russian Orthodox Church and Saint Sergius of Radonezh's spiritual revival, Muscovy inflicted a defeat on the Mongol-Tatars in the Battle of Kulikovo (1380). Ivan the Great eventually tossed off the control of the invaders, consolidated surrounding areas under Moscow's dominion and first took the title "grand duke of all the Russias".

In the beginning of the sixteenth century, the Russian state set the national goal to return all Russian territories lost as a result of the Tatar invasion and to protect the southern borderland against attacks of Crimean Tatars and other Turkic peoples. The noblemen, receiving a manor from the sovereign, were obliged to serve in the military. The manor system became a basis for the nobiliary horse army.

In 1547, Ivan the Terrible was officially crowned the first Tsar of Russia. During his long reign, Ivan annexed the Tatar khanates (Kazan, Astarkhan) along the Volga River and transformed Russia into a multiethnic and multiconfessional state. By the end of the century, Russian Cossacks established the first Russian settlements in Western Siberia. But his rule was also marked by the atrocities against both the nobility and the common people on vast scale which eventually, after his death, led to the civil war of the Time of Troubles in early 1600s. In the middle of the seventeenth century there were Russian settlements in Eastern Siberia, on Chukchi Peninsula, along the Amur River, on the Pacific coast, and the strait between North America and Asia was first sighted by a Russian explorer in 1648. The colonization of the Asian territories was largely peaceful, in sharp contrast to the build-up of other colonial empires of the time.

Imperial Russia

Main article: Russian Empire
Peter the Great officially proclaimed the existence of the Russian Empire in 1721.
Peter the Great officially proclaimed the existence of the Russian Empire in 1721.

Muscovite control of the nascent nation continued after the Polish intervention under the subsequent Romanov dynasty, beginning with Tsar Michael Romanov in 1613. Peter the Great (ruled in) defeated Sweden in the Great Northern War, forcing it to cede Ingria, Estland, and Livland (the two latter now being Estonia and northern Latvia). It was in Ingria that he founded a new capital, Saint Petersburg. Peter succeeded in bringing ideas and culture from Western Europe to a severely underdeveloped Russia. After his reforms, Russia emerged as a major European power.

Catherine the Great, ruling from 1762 to 1796, continued the Petrine efforts at establishing Russia as one of the great powers of Europe. Examples of its eighteenth-century European involvement include the War of Polish Succession and the Seven Years' War. In the wake of the Partitions of Poland, Russia had taken territories with the ethnic Belarusian and Ukrainian population, earlier parts of Kievan Rus'. As a result of the victorious Russian-Turkish wars, Russia's borders expanded to the Black Sea and Russia set its goal on the protection of Balkan Christians against a Turkish yoke. In 1783, Russia and the Georgian Kingdom (which was almost totally devastated by Persian and Turkish invasions) signed the treaty of Georgievsk according to which Georgia received the protection of Russia.

The Russian Empire in 1866
The Russian Empire in 1866

In 1812, having gathered nearly half a million soldiers from France as well as from all of its conquered states in Europe, Napoleon invaded Russia but, after taking Moscow, was forced to retreat back to Europe. Almost 90% of the invading forces died as a result of on-going battles with the Russian army, guerrillas and winter weather. The Russian armies ended their pursuit of the enemy by taking his capital, Paris. The officers of the Napoleonic wars brought back to Russia the ideas of liberalism and even attempted to curtail the tsar's powers during the abortive Decembrist revolt (1825), which was followed by several decades of political repression. Another result of the Napoleonic wars was the incorporation of Bessarabia, Finland, and Congress Poland into the Russian Empire.

The perseverance of Russian serfdom and the conservative policies of Nicholas I of Russia impeded the development of Imperial Russia in the mid-nineteenth century. As a result, the country was defeated in the Crimean War, 1853–1856, by an alliance of major European powers, including Britain, France, Ottoman Empire, and Piedmont-Sardinia. Nicholas's successor Alexander II (1855–1881) was forced to undertake a series of comprehensive reforms and issued a decree abolishing serfdom in 1861. The Great Reforms of Alexander's reign spurred increasingly rapid capitalist development and Sergei Witte's attempts at industrialization. The Slavophile mood was on the rise, spearheaded by Russia's victory in the Russo-Turkish War, which forced the Ottoman Empire to recognize the independence of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro and autonomy of Bulgaria.

The failure of agrarian reforms and suppression of the growing liberal intelligentsia were continuing problems however, and on the eve of World War I, the position of Tsar Nicholas II and his dynasty appeared precarious. Repeated devastating defeats of the Russian army in the Russo-Japanese War and World War I, and the consequent deterioration of the economy led to widespread rioting in the major cities of the Russian Empire, and ultimately to the overthrow of the Tsar in February 1917.

At the close of this Russian Revolution of 1917, a Marxist political faction called the Bolsheviks seized power in Petrograd and Moscow under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin. The Bolsheviks changed their name to the Communist Party. A bloody civil war ensued, pitting the Bolsheviks' Red Army against a loose confederation of anti-socialist monarchist and bourgeois forces known as the White Army. The Red Army triumphed, and the Soviet Union was formed in 1922.

Soviet Russia

Lenin

After a failed Bolshevik rising in July 1917, Lenin fled to Finland for safety. Here he wrote "State and Revolution",[5] which called for a new form of government based on workers' councils, or soviets elected and revocable at all moments by the workers. He returned to Petrograd in October, inspiring the October Revolution with the slogan "All Power to the Soviets!". Lenin directed the overthrow of the Provisional Government from the Smolny Institute from the 6th to the 8th of November 1917. The storming and capitulation of the Winter Palace on the night of the 7th to 8th of November marked the beginning of Soviet rule. On November 8, 1917, Lenin was elected as the Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars by the Russian Congress of Soviets.

Lenin emphasized the importance of bringing electricity to all corners of Russia and modernising industry and agriculture. He was very concerned about creating a free universal health care system for all, the rights of women, and teaching the illiterate Russian people to read and write.[6]

On December 30, 1922, the Russian SFSR together with three other Soviet republics formed the Soviet Union.

The Soviet Union was meant to be a trans-national worker's state free from nationalism. The concept of Russia as a separate national entity was therefore not emphasized in the early Soviet Union. However, people and leaders around the world often referred to the Soviet Union as "Russia". The Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic dominated the Soviet Union for its entire 74-year history.[7] The Russian Federation was by far the largest of the republics; Moscow, its capital, was also the capital of the Soviet Union.[7] Although Russian institutions and cities certainly remained dominant, non-Russians participated in the new government at all levels.

Stalin

Soviet soldiers fighting in the ruins of Stalingrad, 1942, the bloodiest battle in human history
Soviet soldiers fighting in the ruins of Stalingrad, 1942, the bloodiest battle in human history

After Lenin's death in 1924, a brief power struggle ensued, during which a top communist official, a Georgian named Joseph Stalin, gradually eroded the various checks and balances which had been designed into the Soviet political system and assumed dictatorial power by the end of the decade.

The construction of steel-producing city of Magnitogorsk in 1932
The construction of steel-producing city of Magnitogorsk in 1932

Stalin forced rapid industrialisation of the largely rural country and collectivisation of its agriculture. In 1928, Stalin introduced his "First Five-Year Plan" for modernizing the Soviet economy. Most economic output was immediately diverted to establishing heavy industry. Civilian industry was modernized and many heavy weapon factories were established. The plan worked, in some sense, as the Soviet Union successfully transformed from an agrarian economy to a major industrial powerhouse in an unbelievably short span of time, but widespread misery and famine ensued for many millions of people as a result of the severe economic upheaval.

Almost all Old Bolsheviks from the time of the Revolution, including Leon Trotsky, were killed or exiled. At the end of 1930s, Stalin launched the Great Purges, a massive series of political repressions. Millions of people whom Stalin and local authorities suspected of being a threat to their power were executed or exiled to Gulag labor camps in remote areas of Siberia or Central Asia. A number of ethnic groups in Russia and other republics were also forcibly resettled during Stalin's rule.

Soviet soldiers raising the Soviet flag over the Reichstag during the Battle of Berlin on April 30, 1945; Symbolic of the fall of Nazi Germany
Soviet soldiers raising the Soviet flag over the Reichstag during the Battle of Berlin on April 30, 1945; Symbolic of the fall of Nazi Germany

The defensive war of the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany, part of the World War II known in the Soviet Union and Russia as the Great Patriotic War, started with the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941. It was the largest theatre of war in history and was notorious for its unprecedented ferocity, destruction, and immense loss of life. The fighting involved millions of German and Soviet troops along a broad front. It was by far the deadliest single theatre of war in World War II, with over 5 million deaths on the Axis Forces; Soviet military deaths were about 10.6 million (out of which 3.6 million Soviets died in German captivity), and civilian deaths were about 14 to 18 million. The Eastern Front contained more combat than all the other European fronts combined; the European axis suffered 75% to 85% of all casualties there. The fate of the Third Reich was decided at Stalingrad and sealed at Kursk. The German army had considerable success in the early stages of the campaign, but they suffered defeat when they reached the outskirts of Moscow. The Red Army then stopped the Nazi offensive at the Battle of Stalingrad in the winter of 1942-43, which became the decisive turning point for Germany's fortunes in the war. The Soviets drove through Eastern Europe and captured Berlin before Germany surrendered in 1945. During the war, the Soviet Union lost more than 27 million citizens (including up to 18 million civilians), about half of all World War II casualties.

Although ravaged by the war, the Soviet Union emerged from the conflict as an acknowledged superpower. The Red Army occupied Eastern Europe after the war, including the eastern half of Germany. Stalin installed loyal communist governments in these satellite states.

During the immediate postwar period, the Soviet Union first rebuilt and then expanded its economy, with control always exerted exclusively from Moscow. The Soviets extracted heavy war reparations from the areas of Germany under their control, mostly in the form of machinery and industrial equipment. The Soviet Union consolidated its hold on Eastern Europe (see Eastern bloc) and entered a long struggle with the United States and Western Europe on economic, political, and ideological dominance over the Third World. The ensuing struggle became known as the Cold War, which turned the Soviet Union's wartime allies, Britain and the United States, into its foes.

Stalin died in early 1953 presumably without leaving any instructions for the selection of a successor. His closest associates officially decided to rule the Soviet Union jointly, but the secret police chief Lavrenty Beria appeared poised to seize dictatorial control. General Secretary Nikita Khrushchev and other leading politicians organized an anti-Beria alliance and staged a coup d'état. Beria was arrested in June 1953 and executed later that year; Khrushchev became the undisputed leader of the Soviet Union.

First human in space, Yuri Gagarin
First human in space, Yuri Gagarin

Khrushchev

Sputnik 1, the first satellite launched into space
Sputnik 1, the first satellite launched into space

Under Khrushchev, the Soviet Union launched the world's first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, and the Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human to orbit the Earth aboard the first manned spacecraft, Vostok 1. Khrushchev's reforms in agriculture and administration, however, were generally unproductive. Foreign policy toward China and the United States suffered reverses, notably the Cuban Missile Crisis, when Khrushchev began installing nuclear missiles in Cuba (after the United States installed Jupiter missiles in Turkey, which nearly provoked a war with the Soviet Union). Over the course of several angry outbursts at the United Nations, Khrushchev was increasingly seen by his colleagues as belligerent, boorish, and dangerous. The remainder of the Soviet leadership removed him from power in 1964.

Brezhnev

Following the ousting of Khrushchev, another period of rule by collective leadership ensued until Leonid Brezhnev established himself in the early 1970s as the pre-eminent figure in Soviet politics. Brezhnev is frequently derided by historians for stagnating the development of the Soviet Union (see "Brezhnev stagnation"). Others have acknowledged that despite its inertia and repression (though very mild relative to the Stalin years), the Brezhnev era did offer a relative prosperity to a populace and leadership battered by decades of war, famine, collectivization and crash industrialization, deadly political crises, arbitrary mass murder and arrest, and the volatility of the Khrushchev years. In contrast to the revolutionary spirit that accompanied the birth of the Soviet Union, the prevailing mood of the Soviet leadership at the time of Brezhnev's death in 1982 was one of aversion to change--partly because the USSR's economic woes were proving to be deeply systemic and hence immune to reform within the context of the Stalinist-Soviet system. In 1979 the troubled nine-year Soviet war in Afghanistan began.

Gorbachev

Following the short rules of Yury Andropov and Konstantin Chernenko, in 1985, the reform-minded[8] Mikhail Gorbachev came to power. He introduced the landmark policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring), in an attempt to modernize Soviet communism. Glasnost meant that the harsh restrictions on free speech that had characterized most of the Soviet Union's existence were alleviated, and open political discourse and criticism of the government became possible again. Perestroika meant sweeping economic reforms designed to decentralize the planning of the Soviet economy. However, the Stalinist system was probably beyond repair, and the Gorbachev reforms started in motion forces of change that demonstrated that meaningful reform would eventually threaten Communist Party hegemony. His initiatives also provoked strong resentment amongst conservative elements of the government, and in August of 1991 an unsuccessful military coup that attempted to remove Gorbachev from power instead led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Boris Yeltsin came to power and declared the end of exclusive Communist rule. The USSR splintered into fifteen independent republics, and was officially dissolved in December of 1991 (see Dissolution of the Soviet Union).

Since then, Russia has struggled in its efforts to build a democratic political system and a market economy to replace the strict centralized social, political, and economic controls of the Soviet era. Corruption has run rampant, and the Yeltsin government has been accussed of conspiring with insiders to loot countless billions in cash and assets from the State[9] (for example, Yeltsin's son-in-law became the CEO of Aeroflot, Russia's largest airline). Under Vladimir Putin, who stabilized the deteriorating Yeltsin regime, a considerable decline of political freedoms followed according to some Western mainstream media. This view is not shared by the majority of the Russian general public. In addition, economy and defense developed significantly, and currently Russia enjoys a state of rapid economical growth, averaging 6.7% annual GDP growth for the past 9 straight years.

Post-Soviet Russia

Prior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Boris Yeltsin had been elected President of Russia in June 1991 in the first direct presidential election in Russian history. In October 1991, as Russia was on the verge of independence, Yeltsin announced that Russia would proceed with radical market-oriented reform along the lines of "shock therapy".

After the disintegration of the USSR, the Russian economy went through a crisis. Russia took up the responsibility for settling the USSR's external debts, even though its population made up just half of the population of the USSR at the time of its dissolution. The largest state enterprises (petroleum, metallurgy, and the like) were controversially privatized for the small sum of $US 600 million, far less than they were worth, while the majority of the population plunged into poverty.

Russia's Congress of People's Deputies, in which the Communist presence was the strongest, attempted to impeach Yeltsin on March 26, 1993. Yeltsin's opponents gathered more than 600 votes for impeachment, but fell 72 votes short. On September 21, 1993, Yeltsin disbanded the Supreme Soviet and the Congress of People's Deputies by decree, which was illegal under the constitution. On the same day there was a military showdown: the Russian constitutional crisis of 1993. With military help, Yeltsin held control. The conflict resulted in a number of civilian casualties, but was resolved in Yeltsin's favor. According to different sources, the total number of deceased was between 300 and 2,000 people. Elections were held and the current Constitution of the Russian Federation was adopted on December 12, 1993.

Modern Moscow-City under construction. Moscow is the world's most expensive city.
Modern Moscow-City under construction. Moscow is the world's most expensive city.[10]

The 1990s were plagued by armed ethnic conflicts in the North Caucasus. Such conflicts took a form of separatist insurrections against federal power (most notably in Chechnya), or of ethnic/clan conflicts between local groups (e.g., in North Ossetia-Alania between Ossetians and Ingushs, or between different clans in Chechnya). Since the Chechen separatists declared independence in the early 1990s, an intermittent guerrilla war (First Chechen War, Second Chechen War) has been fought between disparate Chechen groups and the Russian military. Some of these groups have grown increasingly Islamist over the course of the struggle.[11] The total number of refugees and internally displaced persons from these territories today is about 100,000 people.[citation needed] Russia has severely disabled the Chechen rebel movement, although sporadic violence still occurs throughout the North Caucasus.

After Yeltsin's presidency in the 1990s, the recently appointed Prime Minister (who was also head of the FSB from July 1998 through August 1999) Vladimir Putin was elected in 2000. Although President Putin is still the most popular Russian politician, with a 70% approval rating, his policies raised serious concerns in the West about civil society and human rights in Russia. The West--particularly the United States--expressed growing worries about the state influence of the Russian media through Kremlin-friendly companies and law enforcement abuses.[12]

At the same time, high oil prices and growing internal demand boosted Russian economic growth, stimulating significant economic expansion abroad and helping to finance increased military spending. Putin's presidency has shown improvements in the Russian standard of living, as opposed to the 1990s.[13] Even with these economic improvements, the government is criticized for lack of will to fight wide-spread crime and corruption and to renovate deteriorated urban areas.

Politics

Main article: Politics of Russia

According to the Constitution, the politics of Russia (the Russian Federation) take place in a framework of a federal presidential republic, whereby the President of Russia is the head of state and the Prime Minister of Russia is the head of government. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation.

The president is elected by popular vote for a four-year term (eligible for a second term); election last held 14 March 2004 (next to be held in March 2008). Ministries of the Government or "Government" composed of the premier and his deputies, ministers, and selected other individuals; all are appointed by the president. Parliament, termed the Federal Assembly or Federalnoye Sobraniye, consists of two chambers, the 450-member State Duma or Gosudarstvennaya Duma and the 176-member Federation Council or Sovet Federatsii. Constitutional justice in the court is based on the equality of all citizens.[14] Judges are independent and subject only to the law.[14] Trials are to be open, and the accused is guaranteed a defense.[14]

Despite Freedom House's listing of Russia being "not free",[15] Alvaro Gil-Robles (former head of the Council of Europe human rights division) states "The fledgling Russian democracy is still, of course, far from perfect, but its existence and its successes cannot be denied."[16] The Economist rates Russia as a "hybrid regime", which they consider "some form of democratic government".[17]

Subdivisions

Federal subjects
Map of the subdivisions of the Russian Federation
Map of the subdivisions of the Russian Federation

The Russian Federation comprises 85 federal subjects,[18] namely:

Federal districts

Federal subjects are grouped into federal districts, four in Europe and three in Asia. Unlike the federal subjects, the federal districts are not a subnational level of government, but are a level of administration of the federal government.

See also

Geography and climate

Main article: Geography of Russia

Topography

The Russian Federation stretches across much of the north of the supercontinent of Eurasia. Because of its size Russia displays both monotony and diversity. As with its topography, its climates, vegetation, and soils span vast distances.[19] The climates of both European and Asian Russia are continental except for the tundra and the extreme southeast.[19] Great ranges of temperature are typical.[19] In winter temperatures get colder both from south to north and from west to east.[19] Summers can be quite hot and humid, even in Siberia.[19] From north to south the East European Plain is clad sequentially in tundra, coniferous forest (taiga), mixed forest, broadleaf forest, grassland (steppe), and semidesert (fringing the Caspian Sea) as the changes in vegetation reflect the changes in climate.[19] Siberia supports a similar sequence but lacks the mixed forest.[19] Most of Siberia is taiga.[20] Russia has the world's largest forest reserves, which supply lumber, pulp and paper, and raw material for woodworking industries.[21] With access to three of the world's oceans—the Atlantic, Arctic, and Pacific—Russian fishing fleets are a major contributor to the economy.[22] The Caspian is the source of what is considered the finest caviar in the world.[22]

Areas in the south of Russia have a subtropical climate, where year-round temperatures do not fall below +8°C (46°F). The average summer high temperature ranges between 26°C and 32°C (80 to 88°F) with occasional extreme heat in some interior locations exceeding 51°C (112°F). The continental interiors are the driest areas.[19]

Most of the land consists of vast plains, both in the European part and the part of Asian territory that is largely known as Siberia. These plains are predominantly steppe to the south and heavily forested to the north, with tundra along the northern coast. Mountain ranges are found along the southern borders, such as the Caucasus (containing Mount Elbrus, Russia's and Europe's highest point at 5,642 m / 18,511 ft) and the Altai, and in the eastern parts, such as the Verkhoyansk Range or the volcanoes on Kamchatka. The more central Ural Mountains, a north-south range that form the primary divide between Europe and Asia, are also notable.

Russia has an extensive coastline of over 37,000 kilometres (23,000 mi) along the Arctic and Pacific Oceans, as well as the Baltic, Black and Caspian seas.[23] Some smaller bodies of water are part of the open oceans; the Barents Sea, White Sea, Kara Sea, Laptev Sea and East Siberian Sea are part of the Arctic, whereas the Bering Sea, Sea of Okhotsk and the Sea of Japan belong to the Pacific Ocean.

Major islands and archipelagos include Novaya Zemlya, the Franz Josef Land, the New Siberian Islands, Wrangel Island, the Kuril Islands and Sakhalin. (See List of islands of Russia). The Diomede Islands (one controlled by Russia, the other by the United States) are just three kilometers (1.9 mi) apart, and Kunashir Island (controlled by Russia but claimed by Japan) is about twenty kilometres (12 mi) from Hokkaidō.

Russia is a water-rich country. Russia has thousands of rivers and inland bodies of water, providing it with one of the world's largest surface-water resources. The most prominent of Russia's bodies of fresh water is Lake Baikal, the world's deepest and most capacious freshwater lake.[24] Lake Baikal alone contains over one fifth of the world's liquid fresh surface water.[24] Truly unique on Earth, Baikal is home to more than 1,700 species of plants and animals, two thirds of which can be found nowhere else in the world.[25] Many rivers flow across Russia; see Rivers of Russia. Of its 100,000 rivers, Russia contains some of the world's longest.[26] Of these five, the Volga is the most famous—not only because it is the longest river in Europe but also because of its major role in Russian history.[26]

Major lakes include Lake Baikal, Lake Ladoga and Lake Onega; see List of lakes in Russia.

Russia has a wide natural resource base including major deposits of petroleum, natural gas, coal, and many strategic minerals, timber.[23]

Fauna

Borders

Topography of Russia
Topography of Russia
Map of the Russian Federation
Map of the Russian Federation

The most practical way to describe Russia is as a main part (a large contiguous portion with its off-shore islands) and an exclave, Kaliningrad, (at the southeast corner of the Baltic Sea).

The main part's borders and coasts (starting in the far northwest and proceeding counter-clockwise) are:[27]

The exclave, constituted by the Kaliningrad Oblast,

  • shares borders with
  • has a northwest coast on the Baltic Sea.

The Baltic and Black Sea coasts of Russia have less direct and more constrained access to the high seas than its Pacific and Arctic ones, but both are nevertheless important for that purpose. The Baltic gives immediate access to the nine other countries sharing its shores, and between the main part of Russia and its Kaliningrad Oblast exclave. Via the straits that lie within Denmark, and between it and Sweden, the Baltic connects to the North Sea and the oceans to its west and north. The Black Sea gives immediate access to the five other countries sharing its shores, and via the Dardanelles and Marmora straits adjacent to Istanbul, Turkey, to the Mediterranean Sea with its many countries and its access, via the Suez Canal and the Straits of Gibraltar, to the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. The salt waters of the Caspian Sea, the world's largest lake, provide no access to the high seas.

Spatial extent

The two most widely separated points in Russia are about 8,000 km (5,000 mi) apart along a geodesic (i.e. shortest line between two points on the Earth's surface). These points are: the boundary with Poland on a 60-km long (40-mi long) spit of land separating the Gulf of Gdańsk from the Vistula Lagoon; and the farthest southeast of the Kurile Islands, a few miles off Hokkaidō Island, Japan.

The points which are furthest separated in longitude are "only" 6,600 km (4,100 mi) apart along a geodesic. These points are: in the West, the same spit; in the East, the Big Diomede Island (Ostrov Ratmanova).

The Russian Federation spans eleven time zones, more than any other country.[28]

Largest cities

St. Basil's Cathedral and the Spasskaya Tower of the Kremlin in Moscow's Red Square
St. Basil's Cathedral and the Spasskaya Tower of the Kremlin in Moscow's Red Square

As of the 2002 Census, Russia has thirteen cities with over a million inhabitants:

Rank City/town Russian Federal subject Population
1 Moscow Москва (Moskva) Moscow 10,342,151
2 Saint Petersburg Санкт-Петербург (Sankt-Peterburg) Saint Petersburg 4,661,219
3 Novosibirsk Новосибирск Novosibirsk Oblast 1,425,508
4 Nizhny Novgorod Нижний Новгород Nizhny Novgorod Oblast 1,311,252
5 Yekaterinburg Екатеринбург Sverdlovsk Oblast 1,293,537
6 Samara Самара Samara Oblast 1,157,880
7 Omsk Омск Omsk Oblast 1,134,016
8 Kazan Казань Republic of Tatarstan 1,105,289
9 Chelyabinsk Челябинск Chelyabinsk Oblast 1,077,174
10 Rostov-on-Don Ростов-на-Дону (Rostov-na-Donu) Rostov Oblast 1,068,267
11 Ufa Уфа Republic of Bashkortostan 1,042,437
12 Volgograd Волгоград Volgograd Oblast 1,011,417
13 Perm Пермь Perm Krai 1,001,653

Economy

Main article: Economy of Russia
Economy of Russia
One Ruble coin
Currency 1 Russian ruble (RUB) = 100 kopeks (копеек)
Fiscal year Calendar year
Trade organizations CIS, APEC, EURASEC
Statistics
GDP ranking (PPP) 9th (2006)
GDP (PPP) $1.723 trillion (2006 est.)
GDP growth 6.8% (2006 est.)
GDP per capita (PPP) $12,100 (2006 est.)
GDP by sector agriculture (5.3%), industry (36.6% ), services (58.2%) (2006 est.)
Inflation 9% (2006 est.)
Pop below poverty line 7.8% (2005 est.)
Labour force 73.88 million (2006 est.)
Labour force by occupation (agriculture 10.8%), (industry 21.9%), (services 60.1%) (2005 est.)
Unemployment 6.6% plus considerable underemployment (2006 est.)
Main industries mining, machine building, defense, shipbuilding, agricultural machinery, construction equipment, consumer durables, textiles, foodstuffs, handicrafts
Trading partners
Exports $317.6 billion (2006 est.)
Main partners Netherlands 10.3%, Germany 8.3%, Italy 7.9%, China 5.5%, Ukraine 5.2%, Turkey 4.5%, Switzerland 4.4% (2005)
Imports $171.5 billion (2006 est.)
Main partners Germany 13.6%, Ukraine 8%, China 7.4%, Japan 6%, Belarus 4.7%, U.S. 4.7%, Italy 4.6%, South Korea 4.1% (2005)
Public finances
Public debt 8% of GDP (2006 est.)
External debt $287.4 billion (30 June 2006 est.)
Revenues $222.2 billion (2006 est.)
Expenses $157.3 billion (2006 est.)
Economic aid (recipient) in FY01 from US, $979 million (including $750 million in non-proliferation subsidies); in 2001 from EU, $200 million (2000 est.)
edit

More than a decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia is now trying to further develop a market economy and achieve much more consistent economic growth. Russia saw its comparatively developed centrally planned economy contract severely for five years, as the executive and the legislature dithered over the implementation of reforms and Russia's aging industrial base faced a serious decline.

However, Russia's economy has adapted relatively quickly from the world's largest centrally planned economy to a market economy, a significant change during which the economy initially underwent tremendous stress. A first Russian deputy prime minister, Sergei Ivanov, set the goal of making the country one of the five largest economies in terms of GDP by 2020. "GDP per capita by consumer spending parity will be around $30,000 in 2005 prices [by 2020], compared to the current $12,000," Ivanov forecasted.[29]

Crash

After the breakup of the Soviet Union, Russia's first slight recovery, showing signs of open-market influence, occurred in 1997. In 1998, however, the Asian financial crisis culminated in the August depreciation of the ruble. This was followed by a debt default by the government in 1998, and a sharp deterioration in living standards for most of the population. Consequently, 1998 was marked by recession and an intense capital flight.

Recovery

Nevertheless, the economy started recovering in 1999. The recovery was greatly assisted by the weak ruble, which made imports expensive and boosted local production. Then it entered a phase of rapid economic expansion, the GDP growing by an average of 6.7% annually in 1999–2005 on the back of higher petroleum prices, a weaker ruble, and increasing service production and industrial output. The country is presently running a huge trade surplus, which has been helped by protective import barriers, and rampant corruption which ensures that it is almost impossible for foreign and local SMEs (small and medium sized enterprises) to import goods without the help of local specialist import firms, such as the Russia Import Company. Some import barriers are expected to be abolished after Russia's accession to the WTO.

The recent recovery, made possible due to high world oil prices, along with a renewed government effort in 2000 and 2001 to advance lagging structural reforms, has raised business and investor confidence over Russia's prospects in its second decade of transition. Russia remains heavily dependent on exports of commodities, particularly oil, natural gas, metals, and timber, which account for about 80% of exports, leaving the country vulnerable to swings in world prices. Industrial military exports, after undergoing sharp contraction, are now the major non-commodity export. In recent years, however, the economy has also been driven by growing internal consumer demand that has increased by over 12% annually in 2000–2005, showing the strengthening of its own internal market.

The economic development of the country has been extremely uneven: the Moscow region contributes one-third of the country's GDP while having only a tenth of its population. GDP increased by 7.2% in 2004, 6.4% in 2005 and about 7% in 2006.

Recent economy

The country's GDP (PPP) soared to $1.5 trillion in 2004, making it the ninth largest economy in the world and the fifth largest in Europe. For the year of 2007, Russia's GDP is projected to grow to about $1.2 trillion nominally (31.2 trillion rubles) that would be about $2.3 trillion PPP and would make Russia the second largest economy in Europe.[30]

Russia's economics ministry has revised forecasts for 2007 GDP growth from 6.2 to 6.5%[31]

According to Russia's finance minister, investment in Russia's economy will grow by $44 billion in 2007. Alexei Kudrin said investment increased $37 billion in 2006, to $168 billion. Speaking at a conference on economic modernization, the minister predicted investment would double in 2010, to $357 billion, against 2006. According to the ministry's forecast, inflation will gradually decrease from 9% in 2006 to 5.6% in 2010, which the minister said would bring loan rates down and boost investment in fixed assets. He said Russia was expected to double its domestic debt by 2010, but that foreign borrowing was not planned. The minister said Russian borrowing from the World Bank would remain at $300-400 million for the next three or four years. Kudrin specified that investment growth would be primarily due to the private sector.[32]

Some experts[33] believe that official statistic underestimates Russian GDP by 28% because of inaccuracy of decades old statistical system (for example, it didn’t count small enterprises and whole sectors of new economy). IMSG estimated that nominal Russian GDP reached $970 billion in 2005.

In 2006, GDP grew to $1018 billion nominally (26.31 trillion rubles; 2.04 trillion in PPP dollars).[34]

In 2006, export grew to $304 billion, import to $164 billion; foreign trade surplus grew 19% to $141 billion.[35]

It's estimated what direct foreign investment reach at least $23 billion in 2006,[36] overall foreign investments reached $55 billion.[37]

On May 25, 2007 Russia's international reserves reached $402.2 billion nominally and projected to grow to $400–450 billion by the end of 2007.[38]

Knowing the importance of oil and gas to the economy, the Stabilization Fund of the Russian Federation was formed by the government in January 2004. This fund takes in revenues from oil and gas exports and is designed to help offset oil market volatility. This fund was also set up in order to prevent the ruble from appreciating. The Stabilization Fund (SF) grew to $76.6 billion in November 2006. In October 2006, Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov said the fund will continue to increase over the coming years, and will exceed $149 billion by late 2007 and about $260.4 billion by the end of 2009. Russia is paying off its foreign debt mainly from the Stabilization Fund, which hit $76.9 billion as of July 1. Russia repaid the bulk of its outstanding debt to the Paris Club of Creditor Nations on August 18-21. The debt totaled $1.9 billion as of October 1, compared to $23.7 billion on July 1.[39]

According to the Federal State Statistics Service of Russia, the monthly nominal average salary in January 2007 was 11,410 rubles (about $437 nominally; about $793 PPP), 26.6 percent higher than in January 2006.[40]

Challenge

Some perceive the greatest challenge facing the Russian economy to be encouraging the development of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in a business climate with a young and less-than-sufficiently functional banking system. Many of Russia's banks are owned by oligarchs, who often use the deposits to lend to their own businesses.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the World Bank have attempted to kick-start normal banking practices by making equity and debt investments in a number of banks, but with very limited success.

Overcoming corruption is perhaps one of the biggest challenges the Russian economy faces.

However, about twenty-five of the biggest banks of Russia get entry into Top 1000 banks of the world by The Banker[41] Many more Russian banks have very high international ratings by Moody's and Fitch, including "investment" level.

Other problems include disproportional economic development of Russia's own regions. While the huge capital region of Moscow is a bustling, affluent metropolis living on the cutting edge of technology with a per capita income rapidly approaching that of the leading Eurozone economies, much of the country, especially its indigenous and rural communities in Asia, lags significantly behind. Market integration is nonetheless making itself felt in some other sizeable cities such as Saint Petersburg, Kaliningrad, and Ekaterinburg, and recently also in the adjacent rural areas.

The arrest of Russia's wealthiest businessman Mikhail Khodorkovsky on charges of fraud and corruption in relation to the large-scale privatizations organized under then-President Yeltsin, contrary to some expectations, has not caused most foreign investors to worry about the stability of the Russian economy. Most of the large fortunes currently in evidence in Russia are the product of either acquiring government assets at particularly low costs or gaining concessions from the government. Other countries have expressed concerns and worries at the "selective" application of the law against individual businessmen, though government actions have been received positively in Russia. Russia occupies 122th place among 157 countries in the Index of Economic Freedom.

Prospect

Russia is the world's second leading oil producer and exporter
Russia is the world's second leading oil producer and exporter

A first Russian deputy prime minister, Sergei Ivanov, set the goal of making the country one of the five largest economies in terms of GDP by 2020. "GDP per capita by consumer spending parity will be around $30,000 in 2005 prices [by 2020], compared to the current $12,000," Ivanov forecasted.[29]

Russia's macroeconomic performance in recent years has been impressive. High oil prices and large capital inflows have contributed importantly to this success, but a principal factor has been the combination of strong growth in productivity, real wages, and consumption.[42]

Encouraging foreign investment is also a major challenge due to legal, cultural, linguistic, economic and political peculiarities of the country. Nevertheless, there has been a significant inflow of capital in recent years from many European investors attracted by cheaper land, labor and higher growth rates than in the rest of Europe

Russia has more tertiary graduates than any other country in Europe
Russia has more tertiary graduates than any other country in Europe

Very high levels of education and societal involvement achieved by the majority of the population, including women and minorities, secular attitudes, mobile class structure, and better integration of various minorities into the mainstream culture set Russia far apart from the majority of the so-called developing countries and even some developed nations.

The country is also benefiting from rising oil prices and has been able very substantially to reduce its formerly huge foreign debt. However, equal redistribution of capital gains from the natural resource industries to other sectors is still a problem. Nonetheless, since 2003, exports of natural resources started decreasing in economic importance as the internal market has strengthened considerably, largely stimulated by intense construction, as well as consumption of increasingly diverse goods and services. Yet teaching customers and encouraging consumer spending is a relatively tough task for many provincial areas where consumer demand is primitive. However, some laudable progress has been made in larger cities, especially in the clothing, food, and entertainment industries.

Additionally, some international firms are investing in Russia. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Russia had nearly $26 billion in cumulative foreign direct investment inflows during the period (of which $11.7 billion occurred in 2004).

Russia is considered an energy superpower as it possesses vast mineral and energy wealth, which brings great benefit to the Russian economy. Russia has the largest known natural gas reserves of any state on Earth, along with the second largest coal reserves, and the eighth largest oil reserves. It is the world's second largest oil producer and, from time to time, overtakes Saudi Arabia as the world's number one.[43] Currently, its economy benefits greatly from the relatively high price of oil.

Government-owned energy giant Gazprom, Russia's largest company and the third largest company in the world by market capitalisation, aims to become the largest company in the world and the world's first $1,000 billion (trillion) dollar company. Deputy chief executive Alexander Medvedev announced the company would aim to achieve a market capitalization of $1 trillion dollars "in a period of seven to ten years." He added: "we'd like to be the most-valued and most-capitalised company in the world."[44]

John Lipsky, First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, said, "Russia's position is enviable, considering its rich resource base and well-educated population. With the right economic policies in place, the economic outlook will be exceptional."[42]

Armed Forces

Russian paratroopers at an exercise in Kazakhstan
Russian paratroopers at an exercise in Kazakhstan

After the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, Russia assumed control of Soviet assets abroad, and received the lion's share of the Soviet Union's production facilities and military forces. About 70% of the former Soviet Union's defense industries are located in the Russian Federation.

The Russian military is divided into the following branches: Ground Forces, Navy, and Air Force. There are also three independent arms of service : Strategic Rocket Forces, Military Space Forces, and the Airborne Troops. Russia has the world’s largest number of tanks, the second largest fleet of fighter planes, and the second largest navy fleet in the world.[45] Russia has the largest stockpile of nuclear weapons and inter-continental ballistic missiles in the world.[46] It also has the second largest fleet of ballistic missile submarines, and is the only country apart from the U.S. with a modern strategic bomber force.[46] Russia has the capability and continues to develop state of the art military technologies, including the Sukhoi PAK FA fighter jet, Borei class submarine, T-95 and Black Eagle tanks, Bulava SLBM, and the Topol M and RS-24 ICBM's.

Russia is spending more and more on its Armed Forces. Defence spending is consistently increasing by at least a minimum of one-third year on year, leading to overall defence expenditure almost quadrupling over the past six years, and according to Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, this rate is to be sustained through 2010.[47][48] Official government military spending for 2007 was $32.4 billion, however estimating Russian military expenditure is beset with difficulty; the annual IISS Military Balance has underscored the problem numerous times within its section on Russia. [49] Various sources, including the US Department of Defense, have estimated Russia’s military expenditures to be considerably higher than the reported amount.[50][51] By some estimates, overall Russian defence expenditure is now at the second highest in the world after the USA.[52]

Economic factors that crippled the Russian economy during the harsh restructuring process after the Soviet collapse led to the Russian military experiencing large cuts in funding. In the 90’s, this led to a great reduction in equipment procurement by the government, and a decrease in combat readiness. However, due to the high positive economic growth since 1998, the military budget has been receiving large increases annually. The recent steps towards modernisation of the armed forces has been made possible by Russia's spectacular economic resurgence based on oil and gas revenues as well a strengthening of its own domestic market. Currently, the military is in the middle of a major equipment upgrade, with the government in the process of spending about $200 billion (what equals to about $400 billion in PPP dollars) on development and production of military equipment between 2006-2015.[53] Cost of production of comparable weapons in Russia is three to five times less than in the United States. With this major overhaul of Russia's military infrastructure, the (former) defense minister Sergei Ivanov added that he wanted to exceed the Soviet army in "combat readiness".[53]

As of 2005, some 330,000 young men are brought into the army via conscription in two call-ups each year. There are widespread problems with hazing in the Russian Army, known as Dedovshchina, where first-year draftees are bullied by second-year draftees, a practice that was common in the Soviet Union. To combat this problem, a new decree was signed in March of 2007, which cut the conscription service term from 24 to 18 months. The term will be cut further to one year from January 1, 2008.[54] The Army is also in the middle of phasing out conscription altogether and replacing conscripts with an entirely professional force.

Russia is the world's top supplier of weapons, a spot it has held since 2001, accounting for around 30% of worldwide weapons sales, followed by the United States, France and Germany.[55][56] Russia is the principal weapons supplier of China and India, and provides weapons and nuclear technology to Iran. Recent arms deals seem to show that Russia is building on its former influence, both in the Middle East and in Latin America.[57]

Demographics

Main article: Demography of Russia
Demography of Russia 1992-2007. Data of Rosstat; Number of inhabitants in millions
Demography of Russia 1992-2007. Data of Rosstat; Number of inhabitants in millions

Despite its comparatively high population, Russia has a low average population density due to its enormous size.[58] Population is densest in the European part of Russia, in the Ural Mountains area, and in the south-western parts of Siberia; the south-eastern part of Siberia that meets the Pacific Ocean, known as the Russian Far East, is sparsely populated, with its southern part being densest. The Russian Federation is home to as many as 160 different ethnic groups and indigenous peoples. As of the 2002 Russian census, 79.8% of the population is ethnically Russian, 3.8% Tatar, 2% Ukrainian, 1.2% Bashkir, 1.1% Chuvash, 0.9% Chechen, 0.8% Armenian.[23] The remaining 10.3% includes those who did not specify their ethnicity as well as (in alphabetical order) Assyrians, Avars, Azeris, Belarusians, Bulgarians, Buryats, Chinese, Cossacks, Estonians, Evenks, Finns, Georgians, Germans, Greeks, Ingushes, Inuit, Jews, Kalmyks, Karelians, Kazakhs, Koreans, Kyrgyz, Lithuanians, Latvians, Maris, Mongolians, Mordvins, Nenetses, Ossetians, Poles, Romanians, Tajiks, Tuvans, Turkmen, Udmurts, Uzbeks, Yakuts, and others. Nearly all of these groups live compactly in their respective regions; Russians and Tatars are the only people significantly represented in every region of the country.

Health

Russian health care is universal and free of charge. Russia's constitution guarantees free health care for everyone. The Russian health care system is massive, with many more physicians, many more and larger hospitals, and many more health care workers than almost any other country in the world.[59][60][61][62][63] The Soviet Union's public health system was, for a time, considered among the world's best.[64] But despite the large number of hospitals and a huge army of medical doctors, they have been unable to provide people with an acceptable level of health care services. In the past decade, the health status of the Russian population has declined considerably, owing to social, economic, and lifestyle changes.

As of 2007, the average life expectancy in Russia was 59.12 years for males and 73.03 years for females.[23] The biggest factor that contributes to low life expectancy is high mortality among working-age males due to preventable causes (alcohol, smoking, traffic accidents, violent crimes, etc). In October 2005, the federal statistics agency reported that Russia's population has shrunk by more than half a million people dipping to 143 million.[65] The primary causes of Russia's population decrease are a high death rate and low birth rate. Heart disease claims proportionately more lives than in most of the rest of the world. Death rates from homicide, suicide, auto accidents and cancer are also especially high.[66] Smoking also contributes to the demographic crisis, with more than 300,000 lives lost each year as a result of tobacco use.

Further, the population decline might accelerate in the coming years, and if current growth rates persist, Russia's population has been projected to fall by a quarter to a third by 2050.[67] Russia is the second country in the world by the number of immigrants from abroad, mostly from the former Soviet Union, and immigration is increasingly seen as necessary to sustain the country's population.[68]

Age Structure:

  • 0-14 years: 14.6%
    • (male 10,563,567)
    • (female 10,021,316)
  • 15-64 years: 71.1%
    • (male 48,412,612)
    • (female 52,061,604)
  • 65 years and over: 14.4%
    • (male 6,360,038)
    • (female 13,958,615) (2007 est.)[23]

Education

Main article: Education in Russia

Russia's free, widespread and in-depth educational system, inherited with almost no changes from the Soviet Union, produces 100% literacy.[23] 97% of children receive their compulsory 9-year basic or complete 11-year education in Russian. Entry to higher education is selective and highly competitive.[69] Most undergraduate courses require five years.[69] About three million students attend Russia's 519 institutions of higher education and 48 universities. Nowadays, the country has 685 governmental higher education institutions, all of these having state accreditation. In 2003–2004, the total number of students of higher education institutions was 5,947,500, including 5,228,700 and 718,800 in governmental and non-governmental education institutions respectively. As a result of great emphasis on science and technology in education, Russian medical, mathematical, scientific, and space and aviation research is generally of a high order.

The Russian educational system may be arranged into three major groups: secondary education, higher education and postgraduate education. Secondary education in Russia takes either ten (skipping the 4th form) or eleven years to complete, depending on the school. In Russia school accreditation/national recognition is directly overseen by the Education Ministry of Russia.[70] Since 1981, Russia has followed the UNESCO international regulations to ensure Russian institutions and international institutions meet high quality standards. It is illegal for a school to operate without government approval.

In the Soviet Union, education of all levels was free for anybody who could pass entrance exams; students were provided with small scholarships and free housing. This was considered crucial because it provided access to higher education to all skilled students, as opposed to only those who could afford it. Free higher education is the main reason why more than 20% of Russians age 30–59 hold six-year degrees (this number is twice as high as that of the United States). The downside of that system was that institutions had to be funded entirely from the federal and regional budgets; therefore, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, expenses on education took a big blow; institutions found themselves unable to provide adequate teachers' salaries, students' scholarships, and to maintain their facilities. To address the issue, many state institutions started to open commercial positions. The number of those positions has been growing steadily since then. Many private higher education institutions have emerged, mostly in the fields where Soviet system was inadequate or was unable to provide enough specialists for post-Soviet realities, such as economics, business/management, and law. In 2004, of all first-year students, 35% were paying for their own education in state institutions and 20% were enrolled in private universities.

Language

Main article: Russian language
Countries of the world where Russian is spoken
Countries of the world where Russian is spoken

The Russian language is the only official state language, but the individual republics have often made their native language co-official next to Russian. The Cyrillic alphabet is the only official script, which means that these languages must be written in Cyrillic in official texts. Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia and the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages. Russian belongs to the family of Indo-European languages and is one of three (or, according to some authorities, four) living members of the East Slavic languages; the others being Belarusian and Ukrainian (and possibly Rusyn, often considered a dialect of Ukrainian). The roots of the Russian language are some 3,000 to 4,000 years old.[71] Written examples of Old East Slavonic are attested from the 10th century onwards.[71] While Russian preserves much of East Slavonic grammar and a Common Slavonic word base, modern Russian exhibits a large stock of borrowed international vocabulary for politics, science, and technology. Due to the status of the Soviet Union as a superpower, Russian had great political importance in the 20th century. Hence, the language is still one of the official languages of the United Nations.

Russian has palatal secondary articulation of consonants, the so-called soft and hard sounds. This distinction is found in almost all consonant phonemes and is one of the most distinguishing features of the language. Another important aspect is the reduction of unstressed vowels, which is not entirely unlike that of English. Stress in Russian is generally quite unpredictable and can be placed on almost any syllable. Syllabic stress is one of the most difficult aspects for foreign language learners.

Religion

Kazan Cathedral on Red Square after its reconstruction in 1993.
Kazan Cathedral on Red Square after its reconstruction in 1993.
Main article: Religion in Russia

Russian Orthodoxy is the dominant religion in Russia.[72] Islam is the second most widespread religion, predominating mostly in Bashkortostan, Daghestan, Kabarda-Balkaria, North Ossetia, Tatarstan, Ingushetia, and Chechnya.[72] Other religions include various Protestant churches, Judaism, Roman Catholicism and Buddhism.[72] Induction into religion takes place primarily along ethnic lines. Ethnic Russians are mainly Orthodox whereas most people of Turkic extraction are Sunni Muslim. Kalmyks are the only predominantly Buddhist people in Europe. On May 17, 2007, an Act of Canonical Communion was signed between the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia.

Culture

The Fabergé Eggs have become a synonym for luxury and are regarded as masterpieces of the jeweler's art
The Fabergé Eggs have become a synonym for luxury and are regarded as masterpieces of the jeweler's art
Main article: Culture of Russia

Architecture

Main article: Russian architecture
The Nilov Monastery, founded in 1594, remains as one of the most impressive ensembles of Neoclassical architecture
The Nilov Monastery, founded in 1594, remains as one of the most impressive ensembles of Neoclassical architecture

Russian architecture was influenced predominantly by the Byzantine architecture until the Fall of Constantinople. At the turn of the 15th and 16th century, Aristotle Fioravanti and other Italian architects introduced Renaissance trends. The reigns of Ivan the Terrible and Boris Godunov saw the development of tent-like churches culminating in Saint Basil's Cathedral, as shown above. In the 17th century, the "fiery style" of ornamentation flourished in Moscow and Yaroslavl, gradually paving the way for the Naryshkin baroque of the 1690s.

The 18th-century taste for rococo architecture led to the splendid works of Bartolomeo Rastrelli and his followers. During the reign of Catherine the Great and her grandson Alexander I, the city of Saint Petersburg was transformed into an outdoor museum of Neoclassical architecture; the 19th century was dominated by the Byzantine and Russian Revival. Prevalent styles of the 20th century were the Art Nouveau (Fyodor Shekhtel), Constructivism (Aleksey Shchusev and Konstantin Melnikov), and the Stalinist Empire style (Boris Iofan).

Cinema

While Russia was involved in filmmaking as early as most of the other nations in the West, with notable films such as Stenka Razin in 1908, it only came into prominence during the 1920s when it explored editing as the primary mode of cinematic expression. This resulted in world-renowned films such as Battleship Potemkin, Mother, and Circus. This outburst of creativity and innovation was short lived. In the 1930s, Soviet censorship discouraged non-socialist views, stifling creativity, though it did produce the hit Chapaev, a film so popular that the actor who played the main character, a leader in the Red Army during the Russian revolution, actually telephoned soldiers during WWII in character to lift their spirits.

Other notable releases of the Soviet years included Ballad of a Soldier, Siberiade, and The Mirror. The Soviet Union also produced some of the world's most innovative and influential directors, most notably Sergei Eisenstein and Andrei Tarkovsky. Although Russian language films predominated, several Soviet republics developed lively and unique cinemas.

Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russian cinema has greatly transformed. Although still largely funded by the state, the topics and dynamic have been updated. During the '90s, Russian filmmaking decreased sharply, going from hundreds to double digits, though still making occasional hits like Brother. However, recent years have brought increased viewership and subsequent prosperity to the industry through exploration of contemporary subjects like sexuality in the 2004 film You, I Love. Russian filmmakers began experimenting in high-budget modern movies like the highly popular film Night Watch.

Literature

Main article: Russian literature

Russia has a rich literary history, beginning with the poet Alexander Pushkin, considered the greatest Russian poet and often described as the "Russian Shakespeare".[73] In the nineteenth century Russian literature underwent an astounding golden age, beginning with the poet Pushkin and culminating in two of the greatest novelists in world literature, Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky. Other great writers of the Golden Age include Mikhail Lermontov, Nikolai Gogol, Ivan Goncharov, Ivan Turgenev, Anton Chekhov, Maksim Gorki, and Aleksandr Blok. Russia has remained a leading nation in literature since that time. In the 20th century, Soviet literature served the political regime.[73] Soviet writers were organized in 1932 into the Union of Soviet Writers, which was guided by the Stalinist doctrine of socialist realism.[73] Outstanding Russian writers of the Soviet period were Boris Pasternak, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Vladimir Mayakovski, Mikhail Sholokhov, and the poets Yevgeny Yevtushenko and Andrei Voznesensky.[73] In the field of the novel, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky in particular were titanic figures, and have remained internationally renowned, to the point that many scholars have described one or the other as the greatest novelist ever.

Music

Main article: Music of Russia
The Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow
The Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow

Russia is a large and culturally diverse country with dozens of ethnic groups; each with their own forms of folk music. During the period of Soviet domination, music was highly scrutinized and kept within certain boundaries of content and innovation. After the fall of the USSR in the early 1990s, rock and pop music became the most popular musical forms in Russia.

Russia has a long history of classical music innovation. Prominent Russian composers include Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, and in the 20th century Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Scriabin, Shostakovich and Alfred Schnittke. Glinka and the composers who made up The Mighty Handful after him (Rimsky-Korsakov, Mussorgsky, Balakirev, Borodin and César Cui) were often influenced by Russian folk music and tales. This same period saw the foundation of the Russian Musical Society in 1859, led by composers Anton and Nikolay Rubinstein. The Soviet Era produced many prominent musicians including Mstislav Rostropovich,Vladimir Horowitz, Emil Gilels and Sviatoslav Richter.

Ballet

Home-made Russian-style blini with smetana and caviar
Home-made Russian-style blini with smetana and caviar

Russia has a revered and recognised tradition of ballet. Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky composed the most famous works of ballet - Swan Lake, The Nutcracker, and Sleeping Beauty. The great Russian dancers Anna Pavlova and Vaslav Nijinsky rose to fame in the early 20th century, and Russian ballet reached a high technical and stylistic level.[74] In 1909 the impresario Sergei Diaghilev founded the Ballets Russes and took Russian ballet to the capitals of Europe and the major cities of the United States, profoundly influencing the development of dance worldwide for decades to come.[74] Soviet ballet continued the 19th-century traditions. The Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow and the Kirov in St. Petersburg remain famous throughout the world. Russian dancers have achieved worldwide acclaim, with notable dancers including Mikhail Baryshnikov, Avdotia Istomina, Paul Gerdt, Olga Preobrajenska, Mathilde Kschessinska, Anna Pavlova, Tamara Karsavina, Olga Spesivtseva, Vaslav Nijinsky, George Balanchine, Lydia Lopokova, Galina Ulanova, Marina Semenova, Yury Grigorovich, Natalia Makarova, Rudolf Nureyev, Yuri Soloviev and Maya Plisetskaya.

Opera

Main article: Russian opera

The first known opera made in Russia was A Life for the Tsar by Mikhail Glinka in 1836. This was followed by several operas like Ruslan and Lyudmila in 1842. Russian opera was originally a combination of Russian folk music and Italian opera. After the October revolution many opera composers left Russia. Russia's most popular operas include:

Cuisine

Main article: Russian cuisine

Russian cuisine derives its rich and varied character from the vast and multicultural expanse of Russia. Its foundations were laid by the peasant food of the rural population in an often harsh climate, with a combination of plentiful fish, poultry, game, mushrooms, berries, and honey. Crops of rye, wheat, barley, and millet provided the ingredients for a plethora of breads, pancakes, cereals, kvass, beer, and vodka. Flavourful soups and stews centred on seasonal or storable produce, fish, and meats. Primordial Russian products such as caviar, smetana (sour cream), buckwheat, rye flour, etc. have had a great influence on world-wide cuisine.

Sport

Russia is a keen sporting country, successful at a number of sports and continuously finishing in the top rankings at the Olympic games. During the Soviet era the team placed first in the total number of medals won at seven of its nine appearances and was second by this count on the other two.[75] They returned as the Unified Team in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics after the breakup of the Soviet Union and found itself again at the top of the medal tally.[76] At seven Winter Olympics the USSR placed first place by total number of gold medals won and at the other two it was second by this count. Russian athletes Larissa Latynina and Nikolai Andrianov hold the women's and men's record for most Olympic medals. With these performances many consider the USSR as the undisputed Olympic powerhouse at the time of its existence.

Among the traditional sports are football (soccer) and ice hockey. The USSR team won the first European Football Championship in 1960 and two Olympic gold medals, and the Russian Premier League attracts many foreign investors and players, with one of its teams, CSKA Moscow, winning the 2004-2005 UEFA Cup. Because Russia has a cold winter in many parts of the country which makes playing impossible, football (soccer) is played more as a favourite pastime rather than pursued professionally. The ice hockey team has a long history of traditions and success. The famous matches with the Canadians in the 1960s and 1970s brought Russia to the top of the hockey pedestal. There are three legendary offensive hockey players, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarov. These players continued the Russian success in to the 1980s. The Soviet ice hockey team dominated world ice hockey at both the Olympics and World Championships in the 1960s, 70's and 80's, winning gold at 20 out of 30 of the Ice Hockey World Championships in these decades and winning all but two Olympic ice hockey gold medals from 1956 to 1988 (winning again as the Unified Team at the 1992 Albertville Olympics). The 1990s became the decade years for NHL victories for Russian superstars such as Sergei Fedorov and Pavel Bure. Nowadays, there are more than 70 Russians in the best World League, including superstars Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals and Ilya Kovalchuk, from Atlanta Thrashers.

Chess is a favourite pastime, and a sport that has been dominated by Russians in the post-war (1945-) era. The winner of the 1948 World Chess Championship, Russian Mikhail Botvinnik, started an era of Soviet dominance in the chess world. Until the end of the Soviet Union, there was only one non-Soviet champion. Russian Vladimir Kramnik is the reigning undisputed World Chess Champion. Russia has also produced a number of famous tennis players including Yevgeny Kafelnikov, Marat Safin, Anna Kournikova and Maria Sharapova. Recently, Russian women players are some of the most dominant on the womens tour, consistently winning Grand Slams and being highly ranked. Figure skating is another popular sport. In the 1960s the Soviet Union rose to become a dominant power in figure skating, especially in the disciplines of pair skating and ice dancing. At every Winter Olympics from 1964 until the present day, a Soviet or Russian pair has won gold, often considered the longest winning streak in modern sports history. Other sports widely played in Russia include gymnastics, boxing, wrestling, martial arts, volleyball, basketball and skiing.

See also

Miscellaneous



Peoples

Notes

  1. ^ From Article 1 of Constitution of Russia: "The names "Russian Federation" and "Russia" shall be equivalent."
  2. ^ See sources in superpower and great power
  3. ^ The Life and Travels of Herodotus in the Fifth Century: An Imaginary Biography Founded on Fact,... - Page 411 by James Talboys Wheeler (1824)
  4. ^ Russia from the Varangians to the Bolsheviks - Page 4 by George Arthur. Birkett, Charles Raymond Beazley, Nevill Forbes
  5. ^ Lenin, Vladimir (1917). The State and Revolution.
  6. ^ Archive of Lenin's works
  7. ^ a b "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007 <http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-207580>
  8. ^ [1] "At 54, younger and healthier than his predecessors, the reform-minded Gorbachev was openly critical of Party excesses".
  9. ^ [2] "Furthermore, Khodorkovsky was considered a part of the Yeltsin-era "crony capitalism"--a freewheeling combination of politically active billionaire "oligarchs" and Boris Yeltsin's family members, who are now being purged"
  10. ^ Moscow remains the world’s most expensive city while London moves up from fifth to second place
  11. ^ Edward W Walker, Islam In Chechnya <http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~bsp/caucasus/articles/walker_1998-islam.pdf>
  12. ^ Путин вошел в список врагов свободной прессы
  13. ^ Стенограмма пресс-конференции Президента России Владимира Путина. Часть I
  14. ^ a b c "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  15. ^ freedomhouse.org Country Report:Russia
  16. ^ REPORT BY MR ALVARO GIL-ROBLES, COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS, ON HIS VISITS TO THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION
  17. ^ Index of democracy by Economist Intelligence Unit
  18. ^ Конституция Российской Федерации, Статья 65 (Constitution of Russia, Article 65) (Russian). In 1993, when the constitution was adopted, there were 89 subjects listed. Some of them were later merged.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Encyclopaedia Britannica Russia: Education
  20. ^
  21. ^ "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  22. ^ a b "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  23. ^ a b c d e f CIA World Factbook - Russia
  24. ^ a b U.S. Geological Survey, Fact Sheet: Lake Baikal - A Touchstone for Global Change and Rift Studies
  25. ^ "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  26. ^ a b "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  27. ^ "Russia." Britannica Student Encyclopedia. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2 July 2007
  28. ^ Time Zones in Europe and Russia
  29. ^ a b Russian News & Information Agency, Russia among top 5 in terms of GDP by 2020 - Ivanov
  30. ^ Russian government approves federal draft budget for 2007
  31. ^ Economics min. revises 2007 GDP growth forecast from 6.2 to 6.5%
  32. ^ Investment in Russia's economy to grow $44 bln in 2007 - minister
  33. ^ Пересчитать Россию
  34. ^ Российская экономика демонстрирует рост на 0,3%
  35. ^ О состоянии внешней торговли в 2006 году
  36. ^ Об иностранных инвестициях в 2006 году
  37. ^ Об иностранных инвестициях в 2006 году
  38. ^ International Reserves assets of the Russian Federation in 2007
  39. ^ Russia's Stabilization Fund up 74% in 10M06
  40. ^ Уровень жизни населения
  41. ^ Британский журнал помогает выбрать российский банк
  42. ^ a b Statement by John Lipsky, First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
  43. ^ Russia's oil renaissance
  44. ^ Griffiths, Katherine (2007-04-11). Russian giant Gazprom aims to be the world's first $1,000 billion company. Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved on 2007-04-11.
  45. ^ Wikipedia, List of countries by size of armed forces
  46. ^ a b Status of Nuclear Powers and Their Nuclear Capabilities
  47. ^ FBIS: Informatsionno-Analiticheskoye Agentstvo Marketing i Konsalting, 14 March 2006, “Russia: Assessment, Adm Baltin Interview, Opinion Poll on State of Armed Forces”.
  48. ^ Keir Giles, Military Service in Russia: No New Model Army, CSRC, May 2007
  49. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Military Balance, previous editions
  50. ^ globalsecurity.org World Wide Military Expenditures
  51. ^ Military budget of the People's Republic of China
  52. ^ Keir Giles, Military Service in Russia: No New Model Army, CSRC, May 2007
  53. ^ a b Big rise in Russian military spending raises fears of new challenge to west
  54. ^ History of Russian Armed Forces started with biggest military redeployment ever
  55. ^ US drives world military spending to record high
  56. ^ "Russia, France overtake U.S. as top arms sellers"
  57. ^ "Russia: Putin Pushes Greater Arms Exports"
  58. ^ List of countries by population density
  59. ^ Field MG. The health and demographic crisis in post-Soviet Russia: a two-phase development. In: Field MG, Twigg JL, editors. Russia’s Torn Safety Nets. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000:11–42.
  60. ^ Highlights on Health in the Russian Federation. New York: World Health Organization, 1999.
  61. ^ Ryan TM, Thomas R. Trends in the supply of medical personnel in the Russian Federation. JAMA 1996; 276:335–342.
  62. ^ Storey PB. Continuing medical education in the Soviet Union. N Engl J Med 1971; 285:437–442.
  63. ^ The Russian health care system today: Can American-Russian CME programs help?
  64. ^ Corruption Feeds Russian Health Crisis
  65. ^ Resident population (30 January 2007). Retrieved on 2007-02-06.
  66. ^ Corruption Pervades Russia's Health System CBSnews.com
  67. ^ Steven Eke, Russia's population falling fast, BBC News
  68. ^ UNITED NATIONS EXPERT GROUP MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT
  69. ^ a b Russia: Education
  70. ^ Activities overview of the National Information Center on Academic Recognition and Mobility, Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation
  71. ^ a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Russia: Russian Language
  72. ^ a b c RussianEmbassy.org Religion In Russia
  73. ^ a b c d Encyclopaedia Britannica Russia: Russian literature
  74. ^ a b Russia. (2007). In Britannica Student Encyclopedia. Retrieved July 1, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online:
  75. ^ Infoplease.com, Summer Olympics Through The Years
  76. ^ Infoplease.com, Summer Olympics Through the Years: 1992 Olympics: Top 10 Standings

References

Overall histories

  • Riasanovsky, Nicholas V. and Mark D. Steinberg. A History of Russia. 7th ed. Oxford University Press, 2004, 800 pages. ISBN 0195153944

Pre-revolutionary Russia

  • Becker, Seymour. "Nobility and Privilege in Late Imperial Russia", in American Historical Review 92:4 (October 1987) pp. 1006–1007.
  • Russia : a country study / Federal Research Division, Library of Congress; edited by Glenn E. Curtis. Washington, DC: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress,1998. DK510.23 .R883 1998
  • Hobsbawm, Eric. The Age of Revolution, 1789–1848 Vintage, 1996, 368 pages. ISBN 0679772537
  • Manning, Roberta. The Crisis of the Old Order in Russia: Gentry and Government. Princeton University Press, 1982.
  • Moss, Walter G. A History of Russia. Vol. 1: To 1917. 2d ed. Anthem Press, 2002.
  • Skocpol, Theda. States and Social Revolutions: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China. Cambridge U Press, 1988, 448 pages ISBN 0521294991

Soviet era

  • Cohen, Stephen F. Rethinking the Soviet Experience: Politics and History since 1917. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985.
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Russian Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982, 208 pages. ISBN 0192802046
  • Goldman, Marshall I. "Economic Problems in the Soviet Union", Current History, 82, October 1983, 322–25.
  • Paul R. Gregory and Robert C. Stuart, Russian and Soviet Economic Performance and Structure, Addison-Wesley, Seventh Edition, 2001/
  • Lewin, Moshe. Russian Peasants and Soviet Power. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1968.
  • McCauley, Martin. The Soviet Union 1917–1991. 2d ed. London: Longman, 1993, 440 pages. ISBN 0582013232
  • Moss, Walter G. A History of Russia. Vol. 2: Since 1855. 2d ed. Anthem Press, 2005.
  • Remington, Thomas. Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1984.
  • Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr. The Gulag Archipelago: 1918–1956. Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., 1973–1975.
  • Lev Regel’son. "La tragedia della Chiesa russa. 1917–1945." Ed. "La Casa di Matrona". Present. di Gianni Capra.1979.

Post-Soviet era

  • Cohen, Stephen. Failed Crusade: America and the Tragedy of Post-Communist Russia. New York: W.W. Norton, 2000, 320 pages. ISBN 0393322262
  • Fairbanks, Jr., Charles H. 1999. "The Feudalization of the State." Journal of Democracy 10(2):47–53.
  • Paul R. Gregory and Robert C. Stuart, Russian and Soviet Economic Performance and Structure, Addison-Wesley, Seventh Edition, 2001.
  • Medvedev, Roy. Post-Soviet Russia A Journey Through the Yeltsin Era, Columbia University Press, 2002, 394 pages. ISBN 0231106076
  • Moss, Walter G. A History of Russia. Vol. 2: Since 1855. 2d ed. Anthem Press, 2005. Chapter 22.

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