From its inception in 2001, the United Russia Party has rapidly
developed into a hugely successful, organisationally-complex
political party and key component of power. This book provides a
much needed analysis on United Russia by exploring the role of the
party in the Russian political system, from 2000 to 2010. It
explores the party empirically, as an impressive organisation in
its own right, but also theoretically, as an independent or
explanatory variable able to illumine the larger development of
dominant-power politics in Russia in the same period.
The book creates a model to understand the role of political
parties in electorally-based political systems and shows how United
Russia conforms to this model, and importantly, how the party also
has unique features that affect its place in the political system.
The book goes on to argue that United Russia represents a virtual
party hegemony, an outcome of political changes occurring
elsewhere, and so a reversal of the typical relationship between
parties and power found in comparative literature. This has
potentially far reaching implications for our understanding of
party dominance in the twenty-first century and also the sources of
regime stability and instability.
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