During the Soviet era, blat the use of personal networks for
obtaining goods and services in short supply and for circumventing
formal procedures was necessary to compensate for the
inefficiencies of socialism. The collapse of the Soviet Union
produced a new generation of informal practices. In How Russia
Really Works, Alena V. Ledeneva explores practices in politics,
business, media, and the legal sphere in Russia in the 1990s from
the hiring of firms to create negative publicity about one's
competitors, to inventing novel schemes of tax evasion and engaging
in "alternative" techniques of contract and law enforcement.
Ledeneva discovers ingenuity, wit, and vigor in these activities
and argues that they simultaneously support and subvert formal
institutions. They enable corporations, the media, politicians, and
businessmen to operate in the post-Soviet labyrinth of legal and
practical constraints but consistently undermine the spirit, if not
the letter, of the law. The "know-how" Ledeneva describes in this
book continues to operate today and is crucial to understanding
contemporary Russia."
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