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Immobilizing Ownership? The political economy of property in Russia since the beginning of the Yukos affair

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Abstract:

The dismantling of the Yukos oil company caused some observers to reconsider the political and economic development of Russia since the fall of the USSR. This paper, however, is focused on a smaller part of the Yukos affair and its aftermath: What has it meant for ownership in Russia? I argue that, while the last three years have seen a change in the political economy of ownership in Russia, the emerging system does not fit easily into a classification scheme of “free market” vs. “state control.” It is important to recognize that the struggle for property in Russia is very much ongoing and that it includes multiple players. The most important is the federal government, embodied in Putin, but it also includes powerful economic groups at both the national and regional levels.

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yuko (89), 2003 (71), 2004 (70), state (62), russia (56), compani (48), time (47), putin (47), russian (44), via (42), jrl (41), tax (39), govern (36), econom (33), oil (33), properti (32), new (31), juli (30), would (30), billion (27), court (27),
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MLA Citation:

Barnes, Andrew. "Immobilizing Ownership? The political economy of property in Russia since the beginning of the Yukos affair" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott Wardman Park, Omni Shoreham, Washington Hilton, Washington, DC, Sep 01, 2005 <Not Available>. 2011-03-14 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p41838_index.html>

APA Citation:

Barnes, A. S. , 2005-09-01 "Immobilizing Ownership? The political economy of property in Russia since the beginning of the Yukos affair" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott Wardman Park, Omni Shoreham, Washington Hilton, Washington, DC Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2011-03-14 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p41838_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: The dismantling of the Yukos oil company caused some observers to reconsider the political and economic development of Russia since the fall of the USSR. This paper, however, is focused on a smaller part of the Yukos affair and its aftermath: What has it meant for ownership in Russia? I argue that, while the last three years have seen a change in the political economy of ownership in Russia, the emerging system does not fit easily into a classification scheme of “free market” vs. “state control.” It is important to recognize that the struggle for property in Russia is very much ongoing and that it includes multiple players. The most important is the federal government, embodied in Putin, but it also includes powerful economic groups at both the national and regional levels.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 22
Word count: 9360
Text sample:
Immobilizing Ownership? The political economy of property in Russia since the beginning of the Yukos affair Prepared for the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association Washington DC September 1-4 2005. Comments welcome. Please do not cite without author’s permission. By the second half of Russian president Vladimir Putin’s first term in office the news flowing out of Russia seemed more consistently positive than at any time since the initial post-Soviet euphoria. The economy was growing rapidly. Poverty
via JRL #8281. Yenukov Mikhail “China Lends Russia’s Rosneft $6 Billion for Future Oil ” Reuters (February 1 2005) via JRL #9044. Yurova Yana “What Made the Audit Chamber Doubt Privatization Results?” RIA Novosti (December 2 2004) via JRL no. 8479. Zhdannikov Dmitry “Funding Rosneft’s Yugansk Buy Seen a Stretch ” Reuters (December 29 2004) via JRL #8520. Zhdannikov Dmitry “China May Get Piece of YUKOS Spoils ” Reuters (December 30 2004) via JRL #8521. Zhdannikov Dmitry and Douglas


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