Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 15 – Russia beyond Moscow’s ring road is an enormous different and
varied place, one often treated in terms not of its full diversity but only in
response to the coverage of events in the central media and one that has
sparked a variety of aspirations for greater attention to regional rights than
many in Moscow seem aware of.
This
week has brought two remarkable articles which help shed light both on the
unexpected nature of the diversity of the regions of Russia and on the issues
confronting those who seek greater rights for the regions and the revival of
one or another kind of federalism as a means not only of holding the country
together but ensuring a transition to democracy.
The
first is offered by Svetlana Saltanova of Moscow’s Higher School of Economics
who provides a listing, as the website of that institution often does about a
variety of issues, of five “scientific facts” about Russian regions that
scholars there and elsewhere have established (iq.hse.ru/news/198621013.html).
The five are as follows:
·
“A full life exists not only in the
two capitals” but in many regional centers. Indeed, according to the most
recent research, in five major regional capitals – Yekaterinburg, Krasnodar,
Chelyabinsk, Kazan and Novosibirsk – life is rated as better and more
comfortable than in Moscow or St. Petersburg (iq.hse.ru/news/177666153.html).
·
Residents
of different regions have different fears: People in Altay Kray are most
frightened of ecological threats, while fear of poverty dominates those living
Krasnodar kray and Khakasia. Siberians also fear “the arbitrariness of
officials and law enforcement agencies, crime, loneliness and being abandoned”
(iq.hse.ru/news/177663748.html).
·
Foreign
corporations routinely “sort” Russia’s regions, building factories and plans
overwhelmingly in only a few federal subjects and ignoring all the others. In
short, it is not just the central Russian government that is ignoring most of
them (iq.hse.ru/news/190842257.html).
·
Labor
productivity varies by a factor of six among the regions, with 10 to 14
subjects being much more productive than the remaining ones and these
differences in turn help to explain differences in per capita incomes,
especially in regions whose economies are not based on extractive industries (iq.hse.ru/news/190842257.html).
·
People
in most regions are not committed to the maintenance of the existing
ethno-territorial division of the country. Instead, they remain attached to
earlier and even ancient ethnic and political borders (iq.hse.ru/news/177665034.html).
The second, a listing of
seven questions that many regionalist activists and movements have not yet
focused on, is offered by Yegor Yershov, a Russian blogger who identifies
himself as “only a Russian democratic nationalist” rather than as a committed
regionalist (rufabula.com/author/egor-ershoff/1444).
As a committed
democratic nationalist, he says that he recognizes that Russia is “too large”
to be run by a highly centralized state as is the case now, a situation in
which things are controlled so tightly in Moscow that the center can name as
governors “presidential bodyguards, although thankfully not yet their horses”
and can leave the regions only tiny slice tax revenue.
That makes
federalism a necessity if Russia is to survive and flourish as a democratic
state, Yershov says; but recognizing the need is far from answering all the
questions those who also admit the necessity of power-sharing arrangements need
to address before they can hope to be taken seriously and help restructure the
country.
He offers seven
such questions to begin this debate:
·
Should Russian
federalists reject all that has been achieved by a unitary state or should they
rather acknowledge that by holding the country together, that state has opened the
way for federalism in the future?
·
How can one
avoid the risk that by relying on regional identities, the advocates of
federalism unintentionally will end by “strengthening a Soviet identity”
because of how many of those identities have emerged?
·
Even if federalists
can agree on the goal, how can they proceed toward it and what kind of
institutions will have to emerge both to reach agreement and institutionalize
federalism? Otherwise there is the risk that any such move “immediately after
Putin will be an agreement between regional obkoms of United Russia.”
·
What kind of
border changes among the regions should be promoted and how?
·
Would it not be
better to follow the German rather than the American model and have lander
rather than states as the basis of a new federal Russia, “not a Moscow oblast
but a federal land of Moscovia, not a republic of Tatarstan but a federal land of
Bulgaria, and not a Krasnodar kray but a federal land of the Kuban?”
·
If one wants a
post-imperial Russia, one needs to discuss which of the past empires one is
moving beyond. Just which empire do Russian federalists want to depart from –
and how can they avoid becoming implicit supporters of an alternative one
rather than true advocates of federalism?
·
Finally, just
what issues should be under the control of the regions? And how should that be
determined at first and perhaps at some future point changed?
No comments:
Post a Comment