Nikolay Petrov

Nikolay Petrov was the chair of the Carnegie Moscow Center’s Society and Regions Program. Until 2006, he also worked at the Institute of Geography at the Russian Academy of Sciences, where he started to work in 1982.
Languages
  • English

Latest Analysis

    • Op-Ed

    Fresh Faces for United Russia

    • June 07, 2011

    The All-Russia People’s Front, a creation of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, may succeed in bringing fresh faces into Russian government, but its primary role is to reinforce Putin’s role as national leader.

    • Op-Ed

    No Place Left for Medvedev

    While Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has shown no signs of being willing to leave power after the 2012 presidential elections, it looks increasingly like there will be no role for President Dmitry Medvedev in the post-election era.

    • Op-Ed

    Putin the Populist President

    • April 27, 2011

    Although Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is aware of the serious problems facing Russia, his address to the State Duma ignored Russia’s existing challenges and instead offered grand promises for the future with the apparent aim of positioning himself for the 2012 presidential elections.

    • Op-Ed

    Medvedev Up, Putin Down

    • April 12, 2011

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s announcement of new initiatives for improving the investment climate in Russia and reducing corruption demonstrates his readiness to run for a second term.

    • Op-Ed

    A Way Out of the Crisis

    • March 29, 2011

    Increasingly, Russian experts believe that economic reform in Russia is impossible without the implementation of large-scale political modernization.

    • Op-Ed

    Putin's Electoral Ace in the Hole

    • March 15, 2011

    In advance of Russian regional elections on March 13, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had to campaign personally for United Russia candidates in order to overcome voter disappointment and push for a strong regional showing for United Russia.

    • Op-Ed

    Political Dialects: Why Russia's Regional Elections Matter

    Both the electoral system and the party system in Russia are in deep crisis; the political parties are not ready for a change in the relationship between the government and its people and are unable to position themselves to aid cooperation between the authorities and Russian citizens.

    • Policy Outlook

    Russia Before the Storm: More Politics, Less Stability

    • March 07, 2011

    Putin’s Russia—which raised living standards, increased political apathy, and led to sovereign democracy—is over. As parliamentary and presidential elections approach, long-simmering social, economic, and political disputes are spilling into the open, and public politics are returning to the fore.

    • Op-Ed

    A Recipe for Success in the North Caucasus

    • March 01, 2011

    The Kremlin’s reliance on ethnic clan structures to govern the North Caucasus has only maintained and intensified the deep inequalities plaguing the society in the region.

    • Op-Ed

    An Imitation Government

    • February 15, 2011

    The efforts of Russian authorities to improve the state of interethnic relations and security in the country have not succeeded in defining the issues or analyzing the reasons behind the worsening situation.

Please note

You are leaving the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy's website and entering another Carnegie global site.

请注意...

你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。