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Conservatism in Russia

Conservatism in Russia (Russian: Консерватизм) is a broad system of political beliefs in Russia that is characterized by support for Orthodox values, Russian imperialism, statism, economic interventionism, advocacy for the historical Russian sphere of influence, and a rejection of late modernist era Western culture.[1]

Like other conservative movements, Russian conservatism is seen as defending the established institutions of its time, such as the Tsarist autocracy and Soviet strong-man rule. Russian conservatism rejects the concept of laissez-faire economics prevalent in American conservatism, and instead supports a mixed economy, as opposed to economic liberalism. This makes Russian conservatism largely populist in its promotion of anti-privatesector-establishment views, strong nationalism, and social conservatism. Russian conservatives believe that the state should control both economic and social policy, as it aligns with its origins in Tsarism and the teachings of the Russian Orthodox Church.[2]

Overview edit

Russia has a strong history of authoritarian practices. Despite the growth of liberalism in 19th and 20th century Western European countries, like Germany, Italy, and Spain, a succession of autocratic governments has shaped the political ideologies of modern Russia. Due to the stagnation of culturally and economically liberal ideals in Russia, Russian conservatism is unique in its support of a mixed economy and its condemnation of the Western world's broad understanding of liberty and liberal democracy. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the two main conservative political parties in Russia have been United Russia and the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia.[3]

State control edit

Russian conservatives believe in the government largely controlling both economic and social policy, with a strong centralized state influenced by nationalist and imperialist ideologies. They also believe in opposition to Western globalism, and the promotion of Russian ideals and culture with support for the Russian sphere of influence through art and media. The authoritarian ideals in both Tsarist and Soviet Russia of devotion to the state and strong nationalism are supported by Russian conservatives, who believe in a return to Russian ideals in reaction to modernism and globalism, with strong opposition to globalist organizations such as the United Nations, the European Union, and NATO. With classical liberalism playing major roles in the development of conservatism in Western democracies, Russia largely differs from conservatism in other parts of the world with its belief in state control. With Russian conservatives holding largely interventionist views in international affairs, they hold deep contempt for the United States and strong support for the Commonwealth of Independent States other than Georgia and Ukraine.[4]

After 2014 Russia often presented itself as "the last bastion of conservatism"[5] worldwide through its state-controlled foreign media, gaining some traction when in 2016 a conservative German family moved to Russia to "protect their children from sexual permissiveness of German society",[6] but returned to Germany shortly after.[7] In 2023 Russian authorities once again declared themselves "the last bastion" and invited American conservatives to move to a dedicated village in Moscow suburbs.[5]

Social views edit

Social views held by conservative Russians are largely influenced by traditionalism and the Russian Orthodox Church. Like conservatives in other parts of the world, Russian conservatives believe in the promotion of Christian ethics in its opposition to abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia, and its support for gender roles in the government and in civil life. Social conservatism still holds prominence in political discourse. Influenced by the autocratic views held by the Russian tsars and the Bolsheviks, Russian conservatives believe in the rule of law, and the cult of personality. Strong nationalist sentiments are largely held, influencing the support for national and state unity against foreign influence. The suppression of individual freedoms are believed to be necessary in law enforcement and halting social progressivism. Western culture and modernism are largely opposed in favor of realism, seen as largely a product of the consumerist cultures of Western democracies. Under Vladimir Putin, the leader of the Russian government since 1999, Russia has expressively condemned foreign influences, and believes in expanding Russia's own influence, as with the annexation of Crimea in 2014, and opposes nuclear disarmament.[8]

Economic views edit

Although economic liberalism and laissez-faire capitalism has been key in the history of conservatism in countries such as the United States, the historical role of state control in Russia has resulted in the development of state interventionist views of Russian conservatives in respect to the economy. Although both major post-Soviet conservative parties largely condemn communism, Russian conservatives largely believe in a mixed economy, with a mixture of regulations in the private sector with market freedoms, public ownership of several key industries such as energy and defence, and low to moderate distributions of wealth across the economy. Russian conservatives believe in the government intervening in markets and regulating the private sector, as it has a necessary role in the framework of a capitalist economy. Along with other conservatives in the world, Russian conservatives believe in protectionism, and the regulation of global interaction with the Russian economy, through the use of tariffs and government subsidies to domestic producers.[9]

Religious views edit

As strong adherents to the Russian Orthodox Church, Russian conservatives largely espouse traditional Christian views on social issues, with the church collaborating closely with the state in social and cultural affairs under Russian president Putin's successive administrations. The rise of globalization and liberal morality in Western democracies has been frequently confronted in Putin-era Russia. The Orthodox Church's opposition to homosexual lifestyles, support of traditional marriage, and families has met with general domestic acceptance, while its tacit support for Russian expansion into Crimea and eastern Ukraine has earned international criticism. Under Patriarch Kirill, the Russian Orthodox Church has sought to promote traditional morality within Russia over liberal relativism, while working to proscribe homosexual influence in broader society, particularly among minors.[10]

History edit

 
Ivan III laid the foundations of Tsarist autocracy, a system of governance which would influence the authoritarian nature of Russian conservatism.

The traditions of autocracy and patrimonialism developed in Russia in the 17th and 18th century, as Ivan III of Russia built upon Byzantine traditions of autocracy, allowing for the development of Tsarism and the monarchy of the Romanov dynasty in the 19th and 20th centuries. According to anti-communist academic Richard Pipes and political scientist Stephen White, this paved the groundwork for the development of totalitarianism in the Soviet Union after the October Revolution, describing the fabric of Russian identity being interwoven with autocracy. This progression of autocratic governments did not allow for the spread and rapid development of liberal ideals as seen in Western Europe, with state interventionism remaining the key ideology in all Russian parties. This influenced the development of conservative thought post the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, with state control playing a key role in Russian traditionalism.[11]

Attempts at liberal restructuring of the Soviet economy and political landscape through Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika reforms during the 1980s and 1990s were largely suppressed by the return to authoritarian politics under the conservative Putin government, after his predecessor Boris Yeltsin was unable to keep on course with social and economic reform. The Russian youth played a key role in the 2000s, developing conservative ideas away from the traditional Western liberal sense, with the Gorbachev and Yeltsin liberal reforms being seen as a time of political upheaval and chaos. A 1987 survey undertaken by Russian sociologist Yuri Levada found the ageing soviet citizens of the 1980s, or homo Sovieticus, who still had memories of Stalinism and the one-party rule in the Soviet Union, were a dying breed, as the younger and more naive generations in Russia began to shape the political climate of the future. A disdain for liberal reform and lack of knowledge for the reign of terror under Joseph Stalin allowed for the youth in Russian to develop into the hardline nationalist faction of Russian politics, allowing for the polarization of Russian politics and development of totalitarian ideas in conservatism.[12]

Political parties edit

The two main conservative parties in Russia are the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) led by Leonid Slutsky and United Russia led by its de facto leader Vladimir Putin. Other Russian conservative parties include Rodina, the Russian All-People's Union, and the Eurasia Party. United Russia is the ruling party of Russia and largest party of Russia, holding 74.4% of seats in the State Duma.[13][14]

The LDRP was founded in 1992 by Zhirinovsky as a more ideological conservative party. The LDRP scored 22.9% of votes in the 1993 state Duma elections, opposing the right–left dichotomy in Russia like the United Russia party. In 2016, the party received 13.4% of the vote, giving it 39 of the 450 seats in the State Duma. During the 1990s, Zhirinovsky and the LDPR formed a component of the political opposition to Yeltsin in the 1990s, although members of the party largely voted against the impeachment of Yeltsin in 1999. Into the 2010s, the LDPR has often supported the agenda of the United Russia party and Putin government when voting in the Duma, leading some to believe that the party receives funding from the Kremlin.[15]

Criticism edit

Although the ideology itself has not been poorly received by the general public, political parties such as United Russia have come under intense scrutiny as a party of "crooks and thieves", a term coined by activist Alexey Navalny amidst the corruption in Russia which was consistently used by opposition parties during the 2011 election to characterize the United Russia party as being corrupted and concerned with "maintaining and strengthening their own power". The 2011–2013 Russian protests show the Russians public's perception of a flawed election process in Russia, and the yearning for a more democratic process against what they believe has become an authoritarian government.[16][17][18]

The ideology of Russian conservatism has been criticized as authoritarian and an oppressive system of governance. Opposition from both left-wing and right-wing groups has characterized the Putin government's harsh laws in promoting stability in the country, as being exercised to cement the government's own power. Regulations on freedom of the press and economic interventionism have been opposed starkly by right-libertarians, while social views on abortion and Putin's ban on LGBT rights has been criticized by left-wing groups.[19]

Declarative conservatism of the Russian authorities has been described as hypocrisy by those who pointed out the lavish lifestyle of Russian elites, numerous morality scandals in which top politicians were involved, a bizarre mix of Orthodox, Soviet, and Stalinist symbolism (the latter two being ideologically anti-religious), widespread abortion, sexually transmitted diseases, and high divorce rates.[20][21][22]

List of prominent Russian conservative thinkers edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Нагорная, Оксана (2016). "Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas". Ab Imperio. 2016 (3): 429–434. doi:10.1353/imp.2016.0076. ISSN 2164-9731. S2CID 185661858.
  2. ^ Hamburg, G. M. (2006-12-01). "Richard Pipes. Russian Conservatism and Its Critics: A Study in Political Culture. New Haven: Yale University Press. 2005. Pp. xv, 216. $30.00". The American Historical Review. 111 (5): 1630–1631. doi:10.1086/ahr.111.5.1630. ISSN 0002-8762.
  3. ^ Hamburg, Gary M. (2005). "The Revival of Russian Conservatism". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. 6 (1): 107–127. doi:10.1353/kri.2005.0006. ISSN 1538-5000. S2CID 161236368.
  4. ^ Alexeev, Denis (2014). "Russian Politics in Times of Change: Internal and External Factors of Transformation". Connections: The Quarterly Journal. 14 (1): 105–120. doi:10.11610/connections.14.1.05. ISSN 1812-1098.
  5. ^ a b Loh, Matthew. "Russia is floating a plan to build a village for conservative Americans who want to move to a 'Christian country' and are tired of liberal ideology in the US". Business Insider. Retrieved 2023-05-14.
  6. ^ "German Family That Settled In Siberia Reportedly Leaves Russia". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 2017-02-27. Retrieved 2023-05-14.
  7. ^ Times, The Moscow (2017-02-27). "After 2 Months in Rural Russia, German 'Sex Refugees' Return Home". The Moscow Times. Retrieved 2023-05-14.
  8. ^ Flynn, James T. (December 1998). "Alexander M. Martin.Romantics, Reformers, Reactionaries: Russian Conservative Thought and Politics in the Reign of Alexander I:Romantics, Reformers, Reactionaries: Russian Conservative Thought and Politics in the Reign of Alexander I Alexander M. Martin". The American Historical Review. 103 (5): 1652–1653. doi:10.2307/2650077. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 2650077.
  9. ^ LARUELLE, MARLENE (2016-09-04). "The Izborsky Club, or the New Conservative Avant-Garde in Russia". The Russian Review. 75 (4): 626–644. doi:10.1111/russ.12106. ISSN 0036-0341.
  10. ^ Mäkinen, Sirke (June 2011). "Surkovian Narrative on the Future of Russia: Making Russia a World Leader". Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics. 27 (2): 143–165. doi:10.1080/13523279.2011.564084. ISSN 1352-3279. S2CID 154080566.
  11. ^ Pipes, Richard (March 1971). (PDF). Slavic Review. 30 (1): 121–128. doi:10.2307/2493447. ISSN 0037-6779. JSTOR 2493447. S2CID 161573850. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-02-16.
  12. ^ "From Totalitarianism to Welfare Authoritarianism", Ruling Russia, Princeton University Press, 2016, pp. 130–163, doi:10.2307/j.ctv7h0s0n.9, ISBN 9781400880836
  13. ^ Sakwa, Richard (2013-09-13). Sakwa, Richard (ed.). Power and Policy in Putin's Russia. doi:10.4324/9781315876184. ISBN 9781315876184.
  14. ^ . The Washington Post. 2018-03-27. Archived from the original on 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  15. ^ Gel’man, Vladimir (2014), "Trajectories of Russian Politics: An Interpretation", Developments in Russian Politics 8, Macmillan Education UK, pp. 247–263, doi:10.1007/978-1-137-39215-2_15, ISBN 9781137392138
  16. ^ "Большинство тех, кто голосовал против ПЖиВ, не читали Навального, не ужасались происшествию на Ленинском проспекте. У каждого из них случился какой-то свой персональный Ленинский проспект". Новая газета - Novayagazeta.ru (in Russian). 2011-12-06. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  17. ^ Osborn, Andrew (2011-12-10). "Bloggers who are changing the face of Russia as the Snow Revolution takes hold". ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  18. ^ "Vladimir Putin, Patriarch Kirill alliance puts atheists at risk in Russia". The Washington Times. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  19. ^ Mendras, Marie (2017-11-01). "The future is history: how totalitarianism reclaimed Russia". International Affairs. 93 (6): 1489–1491. doi:10.1093/ia/iix209. ISSN 0020-5850.
  20. ^ "What does Moscow believe in? Russian conservatism is not necessarily the same as Western conservatism | Visegrád Post". 2021-04-17. Retrieved 2023-05-14.
  21. ^ "How conservative is the Russian regime?". openDemocracy. Retrieved 2023-05-14.
  22. ^ Applebaum, Anne (2019-12-12). "The False Romance of Russia". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2023-05-14.

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in Russia Russian Konservatizm is a broad system of political beliefs in Russia that is characterized by support for Orthodox values Russian imperialism statism economic interventionism advocacy for the historical Russian sphere of influence and a rejection of late modernist era Western culture 1 Like other conservative movements Russian conservatism is seen as defending the established institutions of its time such as the Tsarist autocracy and Soviet strong man rule Russian conservatism rejects the concept of laissez faire economics prevalent in American conservatism and instead supports a mixed economy as opposed to economic liberalism This makes Russian conservatism largely populist in its promotion of anti privatesector establishment views strong nationalism and social conservatism Russian conservatives believe that the state should control both economic and social policy as it aligns with its origins in Tsarism and the teachings of the Russian Orthodox Church 2 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 State control 1 2 Social views 1 3 Economic views 1 4 Religious views 2 History 3 Political parties 4 Criticism 5 List of prominent Russian conservative thinkers 6 See also 7 ReferencesOverview editRussia has a strong history of authoritarian practices Despite the growth of liberalism in 19th and 20th century Western European countries like Germany Italy and Spain a succession of autocratic governments has shaped the political ideologies of modern Russia Due to the stagnation of culturally and economically liberal ideals in Russia Russian conservatism is unique in its support of a mixed economy and its condemnation of the Western world s broad understanding of liberty and liberal democracy After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 the two main conservative political parties in Russia have been United Russia and the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia 3 State control edit Russian conservatives believe in the government largely controlling both economic and social policy with a strong centralized state influenced by nationalist and imperialist ideologies They also believe in opposition to Western globalism and the promotion of Russian ideals and culture with support for the Russian sphere of influence through art and media The authoritarian ideals in both Tsarist and Soviet Russia of devotion to the state and strong nationalism are supported by Russian conservatives who believe in a return to Russian ideals in reaction to modernism and globalism with strong opposition to globalist organizations such as the United Nations the European Union and NATO With classical liberalism playing major roles in the development of conservatism in Western democracies Russia largely differs from conservatism in other parts of the world with its belief in state control With Russian conservatives holding largely interventionist views in international affairs they hold deep contempt for the United States and strong support for the Commonwealth of Independent States other than Georgia and Ukraine 4 After 2014 Russia often presented itself as the last bastion of conservatism 5 worldwide through its state controlled foreign media gaining some traction when in 2016 a conservative German family moved to Russia to protect their children from sexual permissiveness of German society 6 but returned to Germany shortly after 7 In 2023 Russian authorities once again declared themselves the last bastion and invited American conservatives to move to a dedicated village in Moscow suburbs 5 Social views edit Social views held by conservative Russians are largely influenced by traditionalism and the Russian Orthodox Church Like conservatives in other parts of the world Russian conservatives believe in the promotion of Christian ethics in its opposition to abortion homosexuality euthanasia and its support for gender roles in the government and in civil life Social conservatism still holds prominence in political discourse Influenced by the autocratic views held by the Russian tsars and the Bolsheviks Russian conservatives believe in the rule of law and the cult of personality Strong nationalist sentiments are largely held influencing the support for national and state unity against foreign influence The suppression of individual freedoms are believed to be necessary in law enforcement and halting social progressivism Western culture and modernism are largely opposed in favor of realism seen as largely a product of the consumerist cultures of Western democracies Under Vladimir Putin the leader of the Russian government since 1999 Russia has expressively condemned foreign influences and believes in expanding Russia s own influence as with the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and opposes nuclear disarmament 8 Economic views edit Although economic liberalism and laissez faire capitalism has been key in the history of conservatism in countries such as the United States the historical role of state control in Russia has resulted in the development of state interventionist views of Russian conservatives in respect to the economy Although both major post Soviet conservative parties largely condemn communism Russian conservatives largely believe in a mixed economy with a mixture of regulations in the private sector with market freedoms public ownership of several key industries such as energy and defence and low to moderate distributions of wealth across the economy Russian conservatives believe in the government intervening in markets and regulating the private sector as it has a necessary role in the framework of a capitalist economy Along with other conservatives in the world Russian conservatives believe in protectionism and the regulation of global interaction with the Russian economy through the use of tariffs and government subsidies to domestic producers 9 Religious views edit As strong adherents to the Russian Orthodox Church Russian conservatives largely espouse traditional Christian views on social issues with the church collaborating closely with the state in social and cultural affairs under Russian president Putin s successive administrations The rise of globalization and liberal morality in Western democracies has been frequently confronted in Putin era Russia The Orthodox Church s opposition to homosexual lifestyles support of traditional marriage and families has met with general domestic acceptance while its tacit support for Russian expansion into Crimea and eastern Ukraine has earned international criticism Under Patriarch Kirill the Russian Orthodox Church has sought to promote traditional morality within Russia over liberal relativism while working to proscribe homosexual influence in broader society particularly among minors 10 History edit nbsp Ivan III laid the foundations of Tsarist autocracy a system of governance which would influence the authoritarian nature of Russian conservatism The traditions of autocracy and patrimonialism developed in Russia in the 17th and 18th century as Ivan III of Russia built upon Byzantine traditions of autocracy allowing for the development of Tsarism and the monarchy of the Romanov dynasty in the 19th and 20th centuries According to anti communist academic Richard Pipes and political scientist Stephen White this paved the groundwork for the development of totalitarianism in the Soviet Union after the October Revolution describing the fabric of Russian identity being interwoven with autocracy This progression of autocratic governments did not allow for the spread and rapid development of liberal ideals as seen in Western Europe with state interventionism remaining the key ideology in all Russian parties This influenced the development of conservative thought post the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 with state control playing a key role in Russian traditionalism 11 Attempts at liberal restructuring of the Soviet economy and political landscape through Mikhail Gorbachev s perestroika reforms during the 1980s and 1990s were largely suppressed by the return to authoritarian politics under the conservative Putin government after his predecessor Boris Yeltsin was unable to keep on course with social and economic reform The Russian youth played a key role in the 2000s developing conservative ideas away from the traditional Western liberal sense with the Gorbachev and Yeltsin liberal reforms being seen as a time of political upheaval and chaos A 1987 survey undertaken by Russian sociologist Yuri Levada found the ageing soviet citizens of the 1980s or homo Sovieticus who still had memories of Stalinism and the one party rule in the Soviet Union were a dying breed as the younger and more naive generations in Russia began to shape the political climate of the future A disdain for liberal reform and lack of knowledge for the reign of terror under Joseph Stalin allowed for the youth in Russian to develop into the hardline nationalist faction of Russian politics allowing for the polarization of Russian politics and development of totalitarian ideas in conservatism 12 Political parties editThe two main conservative parties in Russia are the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia LDPR led by Leonid Slutsky and United Russia led by its de facto leader Vladimir Putin Other Russian conservative parties include Rodina the Russian All People s Union and the Eurasia Party United Russia is the ruling party of Russia and largest party of Russia holding 74 4 of seats in the State Duma 13 14 The LDRP was founded in 1992 by Zhirinovsky as a more ideological conservative party The LDRP scored 22 9 of votes in the 1993 state Duma elections opposing the right left dichotomy in Russia like the United Russia party In 2016 the party received 13 4 of the vote giving it 39 of the 450 seats in the State Duma During the 1990s Zhirinovsky and the LDPR formed a component of the political opposition to Yeltsin in the 1990s although members of the party largely voted against the impeachment of Yeltsin in 1999 Into the 2010s the LDPR has often supported the agenda of the United Russia party and Putin government when voting in the Duma leading some to believe that the party receives funding from the Kremlin 15 Criticism editAlthough the ideology itself has not been poorly received by the general public political parties such as United Russia have come under intense scrutiny as a party of crooks and thieves a term coined by activist Alexey Navalny amidst the corruption in Russia which was consistently used by opposition parties during the 2011 election to characterize the United Russia party as being corrupted and concerned with maintaining and strengthening their own power The 2011 2013 Russian protests show the Russians public s perception of a flawed election process in Russia and the yearning for a more democratic process against what they believe has become an authoritarian government 16 17 18 The ideology of Russian conservatism has been criticized as authoritarian and an oppressive system of governance Opposition from both left wing and right wing groups has characterized the Putin government s harsh laws in promoting stability in the country as being exercised to cement the government s own power Regulations on freedom of the press and economic interventionism have been opposed starkly by right libertarians while social views on abortion and Putin s ban on LGBT rights has been criticized by left wing groups 19 Declarative conservatism of the Russian authorities has been described as hypocrisy by those who pointed out the lavish lifestyle of Russian elites numerous morality scandals in which top politicians were involved a bizarre mix of Orthodox Soviet and Stalinist symbolism the latter two being ideologically anti religious widespread abortion sexually transmitted diseases and high divorce rates 20 21 22 List of prominent Russian conservative thinkers editNikolay Danilevsky Fyodor Dostoevsky Ivan Ilyin Mikhail Katkov Konstantin Leontiev Natalia Narochnitskaya Konstantin Pobedonostsev Igor Shafarevich Vladimir Solovyov Sergey Solovyov Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Nikolay Strakhov Lev Tikhomirov Sergei TrubetskoySee also editElections in Russia Eurasianism History of Russia History of Russia 1991 present History of the Soviet Union Liberalism in Russia Neo Stalinism Opposition to Vladimir Putin in Russia Politics of Russia Putinism Traditionalist conservatismReferences edit Nagornaya Oksana 2016 Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas Ab Imperio 2016 3 429 434 doi 10 1353 imp 2016 0076 ISSN 2164 9731 S2CID 185661858 Hamburg G M 2006 12 01 Richard Pipes Russian Conservatism and Its Critics A Study in Political Culture New Haven Yale University Press 2005 Pp xv 216 30 00 The American Historical Review 111 5 1630 1631 doi 10 1086 ahr 111 5 1630 ISSN 0002 8762 Hamburg Gary M 2005 The Revival of Russian Conservatism Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 6 1 107 127 doi 10 1353 kri 2005 0006 ISSN 1538 5000 S2CID 161236368 Alexeev Denis 2014 Russian Politics in Times of Change Internal and External Factors of Transformation Connections The Quarterly Journal 14 1 105 120 doi 10 11610 connections 14 1 05 ISSN 1812 1098 a b Loh Matthew Russia is floating a plan to build a village for conservative Americans who want to move to a Christian country and are tired of liberal ideology in the US Business Insider Retrieved 2023 05 14 German Family That Settled In Siberia Reportedly Leaves Russia Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 2017 02 27 Retrieved 2023 05 14 Times The Moscow 2017 02 27 After 2 Months in Rural Russia German Sex Refugees Return Home The Moscow Times Retrieved 2023 05 14 Flynn James T December 1998 Alexander M Martin Romantics Reformers Reactionaries Russian Conservative Thought and Politics in the Reign of Alexander I Romantics Reformers Reactionaries Russian Conservative Thought and Politics in the Reign of Alexander I Alexander M Martin The American Historical Review 103 5 1652 1653 doi 10 2307 2650077 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 2650077 LARUELLE MARLENE 2016 09 04 The Izborsky Club or the New Conservative Avant Garde in Russia The Russian Review 75 4 626 644 doi 10 1111 russ 12106 ISSN 0036 0341 Makinen Sirke June 2011 Surkovian Narrative on the Future of Russia Making Russia a World Leader Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics 27 2 143 165 doi 10 1080 13523279 2011 564084 ISSN 1352 3279 S2CID 154080566 Pipes Richard March 1971 Russian Conservatism in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century PDF Slavic Review 30 1 121 128 doi 10 2307 2493447 ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 2493447 S2CID 161573850 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 16 From Totalitarianism to Welfare Authoritarianism Ruling Russia Princeton University Press 2016 pp 130 163 doi 10 2307 j ctv7h0s0n 9 ISBN 9781400880836 Sakwa Richard 2013 09 13 Sakwa Richard ed Power and Policy in Putin s Russia doi 10 4324 9781315876184 ISBN 9781315876184 Kremlin Backed Opposition Party Foundering as Elections Loom The Washington Post 2018 03 27 Archived from the original on 2018 03 27 Retrieved 2019 06 11 Gel man Vladimir 2014 Trajectories of Russian Politics An Interpretation Developments in Russian Politics 8 Macmillan Education UK pp 247 263 doi 10 1007 978 1 137 39215 2 15 ISBN 9781137392138 Bolshinstvo teh kto golosoval protiv PZhiV ne chitali Navalnogo ne uzhasalis proisshestviyu na Leninskom prospekte U kazhdogo iz nih sluchilsya kakoj to svoj personalnyj Leninskij prospekt Novaya gazeta Novayagazeta ru in Russian 2011 12 06 Retrieved 2019 06 11 Osborn Andrew 2011 12 10 Bloggers who are changing the face of Russia as the Snow Revolution takes hold ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2019 06 11 Vladimir Putin Patriarch Kirill alliance puts atheists at risk in Russia The Washington Times Retrieved 2019 06 11 Mendras Marie 2017 11 01 The future is history how totalitarianism reclaimed Russia International Affairs 93 6 1489 1491 doi 10 1093 ia iix209 ISSN 0020 5850 What does Moscow believe in Russian conservatism is not necessarily the same as Western conservatism Visegrad Post 2021 04 17 Retrieved 2023 05 14 How conservative is the Russian regime openDemocracy Retrieved 2023 05 14 Applebaum Anne 2019 12 12 The False Romance of Russia The Atlantic Retrieved 2023 05 14 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conservatism in Russia amp oldid 1208533035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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