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PANOV, PETR (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   144190


Levels of centralisation and autonomy in Russia’s ‘party of power’: cross-regional variations / Panov, Petr; Ross, Cameron   Article
Ross, Cameron Article
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Summary/Abstract The institutionalisation and nationalisation of Russia’s party system, which is dominated by United Russia (Edinaya Rossiya—UR), has played a major role in the building of Putin’s ‘power vertical’. Nevertheless, despite the fact that formal relations within UR are highly centralised, informal practices allow for far greater degrees of regional autonomy. Focusing on UR’s candidate selection for the 2011 Duma election this article provides an examination of cross-regional variations in the relations between UR’s Party Centre and its regional branches. As electoral legislation requires the segmentation of party lists into ‘regional groups’, the composition of the regional lists, specifically the share of ‘native candidates’, is considered as an indicator of the level of autonomy of regional branches. Ordinal regression analysis confirms our main theoretical hypotheses. In the more financially autonomous regions, UR’s regional branches will have more leverage and bargaining power in their relations with the Party Centre. A second important factor is heterogeneity: the more a region’s socio-economic indices deviate from the national average (either up or down), the less its UR branch is subordinate to the Party Centre.
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2
ID:   120684


Sub-national elections in Russia: variations in United Russia's domination of regional assemblies / Panov, Petr; Ross, Cameron   Journal Article
Ross, Cameron Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This study examines the support for United Russia in 43 regional assembly elections which were conducted over the period from March 2008 to March 2011. In contrast to previous studies, which have tended to focus on the overall results of regional elections or just on the party-list votes, it provides a quantitative analysis of the votes for United Russia in the plural single member district contests. By widening the traditional focus on the aggregate results and party-list voting the study brings to light important variations in the patterns of United Russia's electoral domination of regional assemblies. The specific form of United Russia's domination depends on the configuration of regional elites and their strategies. Social and economic features of the regions have little impact on the degree and modes of United Russia's electoral domination, but influence the ability of regional leaders to ensure electoral mobilisation in the regions and this is more significant the higher the level of the election.
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3
ID:   164515


Volatility in electoral support for United Russia: cross-regional variations in Putin’s electoral authoritarian regime / Panov, Petr; Ross, Cameron   Journal Article
Ross, Cameron Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Grounded in the main theoretical approaches to the study of electoral volatility, this article examines cross-regional variations in the levels of volatility for United Russia (UR) in Duma elections over the period 2003–2016, which are juxtaposed with the level of volatility for the Kremlin’s candidates in presidential elections. The main finding is that ‘regime type’ or, more precisely, ‘authoritarianism’ is the key explanatory variable. Stronger authoritarian rulers are able to control regional elites and ensure the best results for UR by exerting administrative pressure on voters. This reduces the level of volatility in support for UR. At the same time, economic and institutional explanations have a partial significance. Here, Duma elections differ from presidential elections, which demonstrate a much lower degree of volatility; in addition, economic factors appear insignificant.
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4
ID:   162781


World of ethnic regional autonomies: introducing the new dataset / Panov, Petr   Journal Article
Panov, Petr Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The article introduces the Ethnic Regional Autonomies Dataset (ERAD), which describes the contemporary population of politically autonomous regions established on the basis of ethnicity. We conceptualize an ERA as a special case of accommodative policy related to decentralization/devolution of powers to relevant territorially concentrated ethnic groups. The data captures the major characteristics of ERAs across the world, including demographic, economy, and politics. We describe the process of compiling the comprehensive list of ethnoregional autonomies and discuss the issues of coding and mis-categorization. Finally, we present descriptive statistics and illustrative cases alongside exploratory analysis of the data. We conclude with the prospects for future developments.
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