PARTIES AND POLITICS IN POSTCOMMUNIST RUSSIA

Citation
S. White et al., PARTIES AND POLITICS IN POSTCOMMUNIST RUSSIA, Communist and post-communist studies, 28(2), 1995, pp. 183-202
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Political Science","International Relations
ISSN journal
0967067X
Volume
28
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
183 - 202
Database
ISI
SICI code
0967-067X(1995)28:2<183:PAPIPR>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
A survey carried out in 12 urban areas in December, 1992, suggests tha t parties are widely believed to be playing a role of little significa nce in Russian politics, and that there is little interest in their ac tivities. Of those that did express a view, communist supporters were likely to be older, poorer, less well educated, and more working class than the supporters of other parties; Yeltsin supporters, by contrast , were richer, better educated, and younger, with supporters of the re maining parties less clearly differentiated. Communists, equally, were more hostile to the market and to political democracy, and more likel y than others to deplore the loss of Russia's great power status, with Yeltsin supporters again least likely to do so. The outcome is a ''pa rty system without parties,'' with an electorate divided socially and attitudinally but those differences not reflected in a stable pattern of attachments to the political parties that have so far been establis hed.