Read more
An examination of women's roles in politics and society in the contemporary Russian Federation as it creates a new market economy and democratic course born of a millennium of history and nearly 75 years of authoritarian communist rule.
The stage is set in the introduction followed by an examination of the history of the Bolshevik socialist state in 1917 through the participation of women in recent multiparty elections in 1993. The tsarist and Communist gender culture is presented, and the book then considers why and how, the Soviet Union disintegrated. Next the editors explore the reborn Russia of President Boris Yeltsin and women's rights under Soviet and post-Soviet rule. The book is enriched by statistical tables and glossaries of the names of leaders and terms for easy identification.
List of contents
Preface
Introduction: Equal Players or Back to the Kitchen? by Wilma Rule
Women in Politics: Past and PresentWomen's Participation: From Lenin to Gorbachev by Carol Nechemias
The Communist Era and Women: Image and Reality by Joel C. Moses
Women in Russia's First Multiparty Election by Wilma Rule and Nadezhda Shvedova
The Changing Gender Culture and Women's PlaceWomen in Russian Society from the Tsars to Yeltsin by Marcelline Hutton
The Bolshevik Legacy and Russian Women's Movements by Norma C. Noonan
The Fall of the Soviet Union, The Rise of Capitalism and the Impact on WomenBefore the Fall: Economic and Social Problems by Alexander Ardishvili
The Gorbachev Leadership: Change and Continuity by Norma C. Noonan
The Yeltsin Presidency, Economic Reform, and Women by Luba Racanska
The Changing Constitutions and Women's Human RightsRussian Constitution and Women's Political Opportunities by Richard D. Anderson, Jr.
Law and Policy: Women's Human Rights in Russia by Dorothy McBride Stetson
Crossroads in Russian History: A Brighter Road Ahead for Women? by Norma C. Noonan
Glossary of Russian and Soviet Leaders
Glossary of Russian Terms
Select Bibliography
Index
About the author
WILMA RULE is Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Nevada, Reno. She has published numerous comparative studies of the political and socio-economic conditions affecting women's legislative recruitment. She is co-editor, with Joseph F. Zimmerman, of
Electoral Systems in Comparative Perspective: Their Impact on Women and Minorities (Greenwood, 1994) and
U.S. Electoral Systems: Their Impact on Women and Minorities (Praeger, 1992).
NORMA NOONAN is Professor of Political Science at Augsburg College. A long time specialist on Russia and the former Soviet Union, she is the author of over 70 articles on women in Russia, Soviet/Russian foreign policy, and Soviet/Russian political elites. For over a decade, her research has focused on women in Russia, past and present, and trying to interpret Russian women in terms of the Soviet experience. She currently directs and teaches in a graduate program on leadership.