27 maj 2026
51 min
Many studies focus on how Russia doesn’t work and why. There’s a laundry list of reasons. Corruption. Autocracy. Imperialism. Exceptionalism. But, how, then, does Russia work? Because there are people, a state, and society. What greases the wheels? Alena Ledeneva has made this question the focus of her career. For her, it’s the informal networks and practices that allow the system, with all its deficiencies, to function. Her new book, Russian Pendulum, is a synthesis of her three books on informality. But instead of focusing on post-Soviet Russia, she examines the long duree of informality through the concept of paradox. For example, the Soviet paradox, “Shops are empty, but fridges are full.” Ledeneva says that this paradox contains a hidden informal relation that ameliorates shortage. She also takes a novel approach to this subject using sculpture and music to represent the paradoxes and practices of Russian everyday life. We at the Eurasian Knot wanted to know more. So we put the question to Ledeneva–How does Russia work? And what does that say about Russia’s historical development over the last few centuries?
Russian Pendulum has a soundtrack: “The System Made Me Do It,” available on Spotify and elsewhere.
Guest:
Alena Ledeneva is Professor of Politics and Society at the University College London and a founder of the Global Informality Project. She’s the author of the trilogy: Russia's Economy of Favours (1998), How Russia Really Works (2006), Can Russia Modernize? (2013), Her new book is The Russian Pendulum: Paradoxes, Practices and Patterns published by UCL Press.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lyssna på fler avsnitt från
The Eurasian Knot
Visar 1–10 av 364 avsnitt
8 juli 2026
38 min
1 juli 2026
54 min
24 juni 2026
44 min
17 juni 2026
37 min
10 juni 2026
50 min
4 juni 2026
54 min
18 maj 2026
51 min
11 maj 2026
69 min
4 maj 2026
50 min
1 maj 2026
50 min