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All books have a history, and this one more than most. Initially conceived of in 2005 as an in-depth study of the early years of post-Soviet Russian party politics, I was at the time just finishing off a three-year British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Glasgow, and about to move to University College Dublin.
With my move to Ireland coming shortly after, the rollercoaster of various changes of personal and external circumstances over the following years meant that the project had to be put temporarily on the backburner. Three countries, three universities and five houses down the line – not to mention the tumultuous years of the Great Irish Recession and the birth of our two children – finally it has come to fruition. The passage of time has had the felicitous side-effect of allowing the study to go much beyond the initially-conceived brief. Russian politics has changed considerably since 2005 – as, indeed, has the world in general, as well as my own circumstances. As the Russian Federation approaches the twenty-fifth anniversary of its first post-Soviet legislative election, it is a timely moment to step back and reflect on how it has evolved since the early 1990s, and why.
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