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4 E. Eur. Const. Rev. 34 (1995)
Russia as an Hour-Glass Society: A Constitution without Citizens

handle is hein.journals/eeurcr4 and id is 214 raw text is: EAsT EuRopE-AN CONs'1TuToNAL REVIEW

Special Reports

'Beter to have 100 friends than 100 rubles.
An old Rusian saying

Russia as an Hour-Glass Society:
A Constitution without Citizens
Richard Rose
A constitution is not only about political institu-
tions; it also makes assumptions about the relations
between the state, society, and citizens. These can
take very different forms.
In a completely totalitarian system, the relation
between the state and citizens is simple: all activi-
ties of individuals are meant to be integrated under
the direction of the party-state. The distinction
between state and society is insignificant, given the
unifying role of the Communist Party. Soviet elec-
tion results illustrate the support the state could
officially mobilize; in 1984, 99.99 percent of adults
voted, and 99.94 percent of the votes were cast as
the party directed.
A civil society integrates individuals and the state,
but it does so through intermediary social institu-
tions that are independent of the state. A civil society
requires that the state be a Rechtsstaat, that is, gov-
erned by a rule of law that recognizes the integrity of
social institutions independent of it, such as church-
es, farmers' cooperatives, businesses, trade unions,
universities, and cultural institutions. Individuals are
not required to participate in politics or accept the
pre-eminence of the state in their everyday life. The
modern state developed as a Rechtsstaat, but until
the twentieth century such states usually allowed
only a small percentage of their citizens the right to
vote or participate in government.
In a civic democracy individuals are not only inte-
grated in intermediate social institutions but also

these institutions can influence the state. Robert
Putnam, in an innovative study of the relation
between individuals, civil society, and the state,
Making Democracy Work (Princeton, 1993, p.87),
characterizes a civic community as a democracy in
which individuals actively participate in public
affairs. Individuals participate through a variety of
social institutions free of state control, some directly
political in nature, such as political parties, and some
non-political in purpose, such as choral societies and
sports clubs. Putnam advances the argument that
cooperation in horizontal (that is, local, face-to-
face) groups creates social capital that can then be
used to exert influence on the state, for people who
learn how to work together have the skill and the
networks to represent their views and voice
demands upon government. This conclusion fol-
lows the argument advanced by Gabriel Almond
and Sidney Verba in The Civic Culture (Princeton,
1963), that social trust and cooperation create a sense
of civic competence that enables individuals to use
their votes to elect a government and hold their rep-
resentatives accountable.
But what happens if the state is not citizen
friendly, because rulers believe that either they or
the party know best what the people ought to want
and how they ought to be governed? In such cir-
cumstances citizens are likely to have an uncivic
objective, minimizing contact with the state and
relying on dense horizontal networks of friends to

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