Contenu de l'article

Titre Les mutations de l'espace politique en Russie pendant la Perestroïka 1986-1991 : les clubs politiques « informels » de Moscou et leurs dirigeants
Auteur Carole Sigman
Mir@bel Revue Revue des Etudes Slaves
Numéro Vol. 78, no 2-3, 2007 Alexandre Herzen l'Européen
Rubrique / Thématique
Chronique
 Thèses
Page 329-333
Résumé anglais The Transformation of the Political Space in Russia During Perestroïka (1986-1991): The Moscow 'Informal' Political Clubs and Their Leaders This article sets out the main conclusions of a Ph.D. on the Moscow 'informal' political clubs created during Perestroïka. The objective is to observe how the Soviet political system was shaken, then collapsed through the history of informal clubs. Although they played an important part in these processes, these original actors are not well-known. The leading thread of this study is the relations between the clubs and the institutions of power. At their origins (1987), the main clubs supported Party 'reformers' while subtly undermining the system from within. With the first contested elections in 1989-1990, however, the structure of this game in particular and of the political space in general changed radically, and the arrival of a new wave of activists concurred to swinging the 'informal movemenť towards overt opposition. In its radical phase, the movement, now called 'democratic', became a basis on which B. Yeltsin could lean on his way to power.
Source : Éditeur (via Persée)
Article en ligne https://www.persee.fr/doc/slave_0080-2557_2007_num_78_2_7093