
Contents
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1. Declarations of Sovereignty: Establishing the Vocabulary of the New Federalism 1. Declarations of Sovereignty: Establishing the Vocabulary of the New Federalism
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1.1 Timing and Sequencing of Declarations 1.1 Timing and Sequencing of Declarations
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1.2 Making the ‘Rules of the Game’ 1.2 Making the ‘Rules of the Game’
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Excursus: The Case of Tatarstan Excursus: The Case of Tatarstan
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1.3 What the Declarations Say 1.3 What the Declarations Say
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1.4 Effects on Federal Development 1.4 Effects on Federal Development
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2. The Federation Treaty: Transition to the New Federalism, Part One 2. The Federation Treaty: Transition to the New Federalism, Part One
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2.1 Centre‐Republican Negotiation of the Federation Treaty 2.1 Centre‐Republican Negotiation of the Federation Treaty
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2.2 The Federation Treaty 2.2 The Federation Treaty
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2.3 Problems of Implementation of the Federation Treaty 2.3 Problems of Implementation of the Federation Treaty
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3. The Federal Constitution: Transition to the New Federalism, Part Two 3. The Federal Constitution: Transition to the New Federalism, Part Two
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5 The Process of Federal Transition
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Published:June 2002
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Abstract
The Soviet regime's political successors intended, from the start, a transition to a genuine federal system. An examination of the formal debates and conflicts between political elites reveals that Russia's project of ‘renewed federation’ developed on several different institutional levels and cut across many different political interests. Three of four stages in the process of federal transition are examined in detail: the ‘Parade of Sovereignties’, development of the Federation Treaty, and the crisis over a new federal Constitution. The content of these documents and their relationship with power struggles in and between Moscow and the constituent units of the new Russian Federation are examined in detail. The Republic of Tatarstan is a special case study.
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