
Russia is one of the most testable cases in AP Comparative Government because it looks like it has democratic institutions—elections, parties, a constitution, and courts—but in practice power is centralized and opposition is limited. If you can explain the gap between “on paper” and “in reality,” you can handle most AP Russia questions.In this video, you’ll learn:Why Russia is an AP anchor case for authoritarianism, dominant-party systems, and managed participationRussia’s modern political story: post-communist transition → re-centralization of powerThe basic regime structure: semi-presidential (President + Prime Minister), with the president dominatingKey institutions: the Duma and the Federation CouncilElections in Russia: they exist, but competition is managed and the rules/enforcement environment mattersParticipation and civil society: protest and media exist, but independent opposition faces strong pressureThe most important AP concept for Russia: rule of law vs rule by law (law as a tool of state power)Legitimacy in Russia: commonly tied to nationalism, stability, and performanceMr. Hutchings History | AP Comp Gov Country Explainers
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