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Carnegie Corporation of New York Spring 2005
Carnegie Results is a quarterly newsletter published by Carnegie Corporation of New York. It highlights Corporation supported organizations and projects that have produced reports, results or information of special note.
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Carnegie Corporation and Russia: For nearly 25 years, first the Soviet Union and then
its successor states have been convulsed by transformation. During this
historic period, Russia cast off its Communist past, embraced alien forms
of democracy and civil society, and most recently slowed the pace of political
liberalization. Similarly, initial administrative changes snowballed into
radical market reforms that sent the Soviet economy into a tailspin. What
ensued was the dramatic contraction of Russia’s economy that only
over the last five years, and narrowly dependent on spikes in world energy
prices, registered the beginnings of recovery. Yet endemic problems of
arbitrary rule, deep-seated sociodemographic ills, and persistent non-market
business and financial practices continue to expose the fragility of the
present calm. If left unabated, these mutually reinforcing negative trends
risk emasculating the national capacity to sustain Russia’s modernization
over the coming decades. Amidst these momentous shifts, one constant has
been Carnegie Corporation of New York’s commitment to fostering
mutual understanding and engagement between the U.S. and the former Soviet
Union. Since 1983, under the stewardship of two presidents, the Corporation
provided roughly $120 million to d major projects aimed at focusing policy,
public, scientific and scholarly attention on the imperatives and opportunities
for taming reckless policies and cementing closer bonds. As programmatic
priorities evolved from addressing the most pressing challenges of averting
nuclear war, to deepening and broadening cooperative security, to forging
partnerships and building inroads for Russia’s integration with
the West, the Corporation remained steadfast at promoting confidence building
and closer interaction between the two leaderships and societies.
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