Part 1: 1. The Original Federation 2. Daniel J. Elazar’s Covenantal Interpretation of American Federalism 3. The Roots of the Soviet Federation Part 2: 4. The American Federation and Secession 5. Conflicting Perspectives on the Dissolubility of the American Union 6. Secession as a Constitutional Right in the USSR Part 3: 7. A Constitutional Comparison between the Soviet and Emerging Western Models of Multinational Federalism 8. On the Integrative Effects of Federalism and Consociation Part 4: 9. The Soviet Union and Nation 10. The Soviet State as Viewed by Nationalists Part 5: 11. Imperial Contiguity and Russia’s ‘Stunted Nationhood’ 12. Was the Soviet Union the ‘Last Empire’?
Tania Raffass is a postgraduate researcher at the School of Political Social Inquiry, Monash University
Overall this is a thorough book by Tania Raffass, showing a good
knowledge of Russian and American political history, and one that
presents a compelling argument for avoiding the tag of ‘empire’ in
classifying the Soviet Union, that it was simply one variation of
what we class as federalism, and that liberalism should not be
conflated with federalism.
- Gerard Clare, University of Glasgow
Ask a Question About this Product More... |