Publication | Closed Access
Putin’s Crackdown on Mortality
13
Citations
24
References
2015
Year
Critical Public HealthDrug PolicyLawHealth PoliticsAdministrative LawSocial Determinants Of HealthHealth LawPolicy AnalysisThanatologyHarm ReductionPublic Health LawPublic Health SystemPublic Health PracticePublic HealthLife ExpectancyPublic Health LawsPublic PolicyHealth PolicyPutin ’Russian GovernmentPublic Health PolicyDemographic CrisisTerminal Illness
Facing a demographic crisis, the Russian government recently introduced public health measures to reduce alcohol consumption, traffic fatalities, and tobacco use. The relative success of these measures challenges common assumptions about Russia’s culture of “legal nihilism” and lack of state capacity. Drawing on two original surveys of smokers at Russian universities, we provide evidence that low legal compliance results from expectations about low enforcement, not from a unique legal culture. To account for unexpectedly stringent enforcement of public health laws, we offer a theory of selective state capacity. In contemporary Russia, the top leadership’s personal endorsements of policy initiatives make clear to lower-level officials which rules must be enforced.
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