Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 19 – Many
Russians currently are pushing for the equalization of all the federal subjects
and the radical decentralization of power in the country, but there are
compelling reasons for concluding that despite the attractions of such an approach,
the existing system of “asymmetrical” federalism is “the lesser evil,”
Viktoriya Poltoratskya says.
In an essay for the Plan for Change
analysis project, the political scientist who was trained at the Central
European University in Budapest says that many analysts after 1991 expected the
Russian Federation to go the way of the Soviet Union and fall apart on ethnic
lines (echo.msk.ru/blog/planperemen/2151026-echo/).
But there was an important
distinction between the separatism of Soviet republics and the attitudes in the
non-Russian republics of the Russian Federation, Poltoratskaya says: the former
was directed primarily against Soviet power and/or communism while the latter
were mobilized on the basis of ethnicity.
At present, one cannot say that
separatist challenges will not arise in the Russian Federation, she continues,
because “there do not exist in Russia formal institutions capable of resolving
potential conflicts with such regions.” Such regions may simply be biding their
time until the center weakens as a result of “a period of economic or political
turbulence.”
According to
Polotoratskaya, “federations experiencing analogous problems have come up with
two strategies: a high level of decentralization and asymmetric federalism.
There are few examples of the former – Switzerland and Belgium are the most
prominent – and they appear to require a small territory in which democratic
institutions are already well rooted.
Russia does not meet either of those
requirements, and so radical decentralization would likely lead “either to
separatism or to ‘regional authoritarianism’ when the regional elite completely
takes control of political and financial resources.” The classical example of such a course of
events, the analyst continues, is Mexico.
“One of the reasons why in
federations in which on the whole democratic processes have occurred,
authoritarian regional regimes continue to exist is ‘the tolerance’ of the
federal center,” an arrangement that allows the center “to use regional regimes
in its own interest’ and also the lack of political resources to promote
democracy of the regions.”
“Russia has already passed through a
period of establishing regional authoritarianisms in the 1990s and, if it
adopted the path of complete decentralization, then this scenario would have
every opportunity to be repeated,” Poltoratskaya argues.
The alternative for Russia then is
asymmetric federalism, like that in Canada and India where regions based on
ethnicity or location have been given certain preferences to keep them within
the fold. Many of the other regions feel
that this is unjust, but they see it as a lesser evil to open separatism.
At present, Russia would appear to
stand before the choice between “construction of a national state based on the
titular nation” with the potential for conflicts as a result of its
heterogenous population and “the recognition of the variety of nations and
their characteristics and the organization of institutional support for
territories with a particular ethnic composition.”
The second strategy is not without
problems of controversy, but it is preferable to the collapse of the country as
a result of separatist challenges.
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