Abramova Marianna Grigoryevna
-
The Mythologem Of The Strong State And The Main Objectives Of Contemporary Russian State PolicyMoscow University Bulletin. Series 12. Political Science. 2014. 3. p.92-113read more242
-
-
Russia’s 2020 New Constitutional Amendments: Where Is the Iceberg of Sovereignty Drifting?Moscow University Bulletin. Series 12. Political Science. 2021. 4. p.38-56read more1151
-
The article offers an analysis of the amendments to the Constitution of the Russian Federation implemented in 2020. The author comes to the conclusion that due to the shortcomings of the 1993 Constitution — adopted in the context of a political crisis — its revision was unavoidable. In the new socio-political realities of the 2010s–2020s, the Russian authorities decided, for the first time, to establish a channel of communication with the society, which forced them to rely on the procedure of popular vote on the amendments and support of the notion of “unconditional sovereignty” as a goal of the constitutional changes. Having received this popular approval, the political regime of Vladimir Putin, representing a compromise between transnational and national elites, announced a new stage of state-building. The main task of this process is indeed the gradual repudiation of the external influence that developed in the 1990s. Consequently, the value of sovereignty and its various types becomes the main reference point of the Russian state policy. Will the opportunity become a reality? The answer to this question largely depends on the future socio-economic track undertaken by the Russian authorities.Keywords: Russia; constitution; amendments; democracy; values; sovereignty
-