Autocracy and Health Governance in Russia
Autor Vlad Kravtsoven Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 iul 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783031057915
ISBN-10: 3031057910
Pagini: 261
Ilustrații: IX, 261 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2022
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3031057910
Pagini: 261
Ilustrații: IX, 261 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2022
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Personalistic regimes and the processes of governance.- Chapter 2. Providing goods: health mandates and authoritarian performance.- Chapter 3. Managing actors: faulty controls and flawed performance.- Chapter 4. Constructing the oversight: organizational atrophy and particularized exchanges.- Chapter 5. Securitizing the epidemic: ideological adaptations and illiberal meanings.- Chapter 6. Conclusions, implications, and dashed hopes.
Notă biografică
Vlad Kravtsov is Associate Professor of Political Science & Law at Spring Hill College, the US.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
The book is the first attempt to investigate how and to what extent authoritarian (personalistic) regimes fail to provide fundamental goods and services. For two decades, Russian authorities spent much effort and money to improve health administration, but most success stories are borderline fake. The failure is by design; because personalistic regimes rely on personalized exchanges and bargains instead of impersonal rules and permanent organizations, all actors put self-interest ahead of patients’ needs. It is a severe problem because authoritarian principals proclaim social betterment as their central goal -- and many Russians take such claims at face value -- but incentivize their agents to imitate progress and tolerate slipshod performance. The benefits of this investigation are three-fold. First, the book provides an analytical framework of bad governance rooted in the rational institutionalist tradition and connected to competence-control theory. Second, it gives a general readership interested in how Russia works a sense of the key political players’ mindset and the regime-induced constraints under which elites operate. Third, although the book investigates health governance exclusively, its analytical framework is portable to other issue areas and could be applied to explain how and why Russia evolved into an ineffective, coercive, and predatory state under Putin’s leadership.
Vlad Kravtsov is Associate Professor of Political Science & Law at Spring Hill College, the US.
Caracteristici
Links autocratic regimes’ foundational features to health governance’s underlying mechanisms in Russia Attempts to investigate how and to what extent authoritarian regimes fail to provide health goods and services Takes readers through the story of how Putin’s personalism strives to survive