Soviet Politics in the Gorbachev Era: The End of Hesitant Modernization
- 1 July 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Political Science
- Vol. 20 (3) , 289-310
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007123400005858
Abstract
This is a sequel to an article written by the same author, which was published in theJournalin 1986. The current pace of economic and political reform in the Soviet Union represents a ‘paradigm’ change, which Western specialists have found difficult and challenging to assimilate; concepts have lagged behind events. The key to understanding these changes and the reason why they have been so long delayed lies in the fusion of economic and political institutions formed during the Stalin period. The interdependence of economic and political factors is explored as a basis for understanding why political reform has been a necessary accompaniment to economic reform. One can discern in the pattern of political reform an attempt to increase the level of democratization without fundamentally destabilizing the political and social order. Since this strategy requires that a new political culture will take root faster than the growth of popular discontent at deteriorating economic performance and frustrated national aspirations, the author is pessimistic as to the outcome.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- A metafísica na crítica da razão puraTrans/Form/Ação, 1988
- Psychiatrist's NotebookGifted Child Today Magazine, 1988
- Economic Reform and Political Change in Eastern EuropePublished by Springer Nature ,1988
- Searching for an Appropriate Concept of Soviet Politics: The Politics of Hesitant Modernization?British Journal of Political Science, 1986
- Contradictions in the Development of Socialism as a Social SystemSoviet Law and Government, 1984
- Soviet Neotraditionalism: The political corruption of a Leninist regimeSoviet Studies, 1983
- APublished by Springer Nature ,1983
- Economic Constraints on Soviet Policies in the 1980sInternational Affairs, 1980