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%T The formation of the political elite in Lithuania at the turn of the 1980s—1990s: the role of “moral politicians”
%A Smirnov, Vadim A.
%J Baltic Region
%N 4
%P 15-25
%D 2011
%@ 2079-8555
%~ Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-328505
%X This article considers the trend of structural
changes in the political elite of the Republic
of Lithuania in the post-Soviet period
through analyzing the role of the so-called
“moral politicians” — intellectuals, artists,
and cultural figures, who played a decisive
role in the period of the communist system disintegration
and further development of the
country's policy.
The role of the political elite, which is understood
according to R. Putnam and J. Higley's
definition, is considered in the conditions
of political instability and uncertainty typical
of transformation processes. In this context,
the role of key actors is interpreted on
the basis of the methodological structure of
the so-called Stanford model developed by G.
Almond and P. Bourdieu's theory of capital.
This article reconstructs the course of political
changes in the Republic of Lithuania at
the initial stage of its independence, in the
framework of which the key role was played
by «moral politicians», most of whom subsequently
retired from politics.
Focusing on the situation in Lithuania,
this research sets out to show the continuous
dependence of today's policies of the Baltic
States on the key choices made by the authorities
at the turn of 1980s—1990s.
Today, Russian political science lacks
concrete regional studies into the issues of
changes of elites in the context of research on
the processes of postcommunist transformations.
This work addresses the scientific interpretation
of the content of mechanisms of
«new» political elite development in postcommunist
societies under the influence of endogenous
and exogenous factors in the course of
transformation. The stabilisation of elite formation
processes in Lithuania, the assessment
of patterns and trends, the identification of
power centres and the character of intra-elite
interaction, and a profound understanding of
the functioning of Lithuanian political system
in general will allow Russia to formulate a
more efficient policy towards the Baltic States,
which would promptly respond to emerging
challenges.
%C RUS
%G en
%9 journal article
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info