|
|
PROJECT: //
why
// where
// pilot
// plane
//
team
|
|
| |
Russia
Introduction //
Resources //
Population
// Economy
// Government |
|
|

I. Introduction
Russia (Russian Rossiyskaya Federatsiya),
independent republic in eastern Europe and northern Asia, the
world's largest country by area. Russia was once the largest
and the most prominent republic of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR, or Soviet Union). In 1991 the USSR
broke apart and Russia became an independent country.
The USSR had a totalitarian political system in which
Communist Party leaders held political and economic power. The
state owned all companies and land, and the government
controlled production of goods and other aspects of the
economy, a system known as a command, or planned, economy.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia began
transforming itself into a more democratic society with an
economy based on market mechanisms and principles. Russia has
made many successful changes: There have been free elections
at all levels of government; private ownership of property has
been legalized; and large segments of the economy are now
privately owned.
The transformation is far from complete, however. In the
economic sphere, privatized assets have not been allocated
fairly among the population and privatization of land is still
in its infancy. Russia must also deal with the large-scale
environmental destruction and other problems inherited from
the Soviet Union. In the political arena, a stable society
based on citizen involvement in local, regional, and national
affairs has yet to develop.
The transformation has affected the people of Russia in a
variety of ways. Under the Soviet system, Russians became
accustomed to having the government define many aspects of
their lives. For many, the collapse of the USSR and the
Communist ideal created an ideological void, and Russians
increasingly turned to traditional and nontraditional faiths
to fill that void. The post-Soviet era has also seen an
overall decline in Russia's population, despite the influx of
immigrants from other parts of the former Soviet Union. Russia
has the lowest life expectancy and the highest infant
mortality rate of the industrialized countries. In addition,
the incidence of several infectious diseases increased
markedly in the post-Soviet era. The social welfare system,
already constrained by inadequate funding, was greatly
challenged to combat these growing problems.
In general, Russia's climate is similar to that of Canada.
Much of the land lies north of the 50th parallel of latitude
and far from the moderating influences of oceans. Like Canada,
although colder and with greater temperature extremes in many
places, most of Russia has a harsh continental climate.
Although climate, and to some degree soils, limit the
country's agricultural wealth, mineral wealth is considerable:
Russia's mineral resources are unmatched by any other country.
Russia's borders measure more than 20,100 km (12,500 mi). On
the north Russia is bounded by extensions of the Arctic Ocean:
the Barents, Kara, Laptev, East Siberian, and Chukchi seas. On
the east the country is bounded by the Pacific Ocean and
several of its extensions: the Bering Strait (which separates
Russia from Alaska), the Bering Sea, the Sea of Okhotsk, and
the Sea of Japan (East Sea). In the extreme southeast Russia
abuts the northeastern tip of North Korea. On the south it is
bounded by China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, the Caspian Sea,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, and the Black Sea. On the southwest it is
bounded by Ukraine, and on the west by Belarus, Latvia,
Estonia, the Gulf of Finland, and Finland. In the extreme
northwest, Russia is bounded by Norway. Lithuania and Poland
border Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian exclave on the Baltic
Sea.
Administratively, Russia includes 21 republics; 6 territories
known as krays; 10 national areas called okrugs; 49 regions,
or oblasts; 1 autonomous oblast; and 2 cities with federal
status. The capital and largest city is Moscow.
II.
Land and Resources
In both total area and geographic
extent Russia is the largest country in the world. With an
area of 17,075,200 sq km (6,592,800 sq mi), Russia constitutes
more than one-ninth of the world's land area and nearly twice
the area of the United States or China. From north to south
Russia extends more than 4,000 km (2,400 mi) from Arctic
islands in the Barents Sea to the southern border along the
Caucasus Mountains. From the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea
to Big Diomede Island (Ratmanov Island) in the Bering Strait,
Russia's maximum east-west extent is almost 10,000 km (6,200
mi), a distance encompassing 11 time zones and spanning nearly
half the circumference of the Earth. Russia stretches across
parts of two continents, Europe and Asia, with the Ural
Mountains and Ural River marking the boundary between them.
Russia's principal islands lie in the Arctic and Pacific
oceans and their extensions. Farthest north, in the Arctic
Ocean, is Franz Josef Land, an archipelago consisting of about
100 small islands. The other main Arctic islands, from west to
east, include the two islands of Novaya Zemlya, Vaygach
Island, the group of islands called Severnaya Zemlya, the New
Siberian Islands, and Wrangel Island. Between these major
islands lie numerous small islands and island chains. In the
Pacific Ocean are the Kuril Islands, which extend southwest in
an arc from the Kamchatka Peninsula to the main islands of
Japan. Russia occupies and administers all the Kuril Islands,
although ownership of the southernmost islands is disputed
with Japan. The Pacific also includes the large island of
Sakhalin, which separates the Seas of Okhotsk and Japan.
Russia contains complex geologic structures and surface
formations. Very simply, however, the landmass consists of
vast plains in the west and north, and a discontinuous belt of
mountains and plateaus in the south and east. The upland and
mountainous regions include most of Siberia and extend to the
Pacific.
III.
Population
Russia's total population in 2000
was estimated at 145,904,542, making the country the sixth
most populous, after China, India, the United States,
Indonesia, and Brazil. Since the dissolution of the Soviet
Union the number of immigrants to Russia has exceeded the
number of Russians leaving the country. However, the rate of
natural increase (the number of births compared to the number
of deaths) has been negative since 1992. In 2000 the birth
rate was 9.7 per 1,000, while the death rate was 15 per 1,000.
Russia is the only major industrialized country in which
demographic indices are worse than in earlier years, largely
because illnesses have increased as the quality and
availability of health care have declined. Although it has
increased slightly since 1994, male life expectancy of 59
years in 2000 is still below the 64 years in 1990; female life
expectancy during the same period dropped from 74 years to 72
years. Infant mortality rose from 17.4 deaths per 1,000 births
in 1990 to 22.7 per 1,000 in 2000.
The overall population density of Russia is 9 persons per sq
km (22 per sq mi), but the population is unevenly distributed
across the country. The population density of a particular
area generally reflects the land's agricultural potential,
with localized population centers occurring at mining and
industrial centers. Most of the country's people are
concentrated in the so-called fertile triangle, which has its
base along the western border between the Baltic and Black
seas and tapers eastward across the southern Urals into
southwestern Siberia. Although the majority of the population
remains concentrated in European Russia, the country
experienced substantial eastward migration before 1917 and
after World War II (1939-1945), especially to southern and far
eastern Siberia. Such migration was strongly encouraged by the
government during the Soviet period. In recent years, this
migration has been reversed, with many Russian citizens
leaving northern Siberia and far eastern Russia for European
Russia.
Throughout much of rural European Russia, the population
density averages about 25 persons per sq km (65 per sq mi).
The heaviest population densities are in sprawling urbanized
areas such as Moscow Oblast. On the other hand, more than
one-third of the country's territory has a population density
of fewer than 1 person per sq km (3 per sq mi). This includes
part of northern European Russia and huge areas of Siberia.
From 1989 to 1996 nearly half of all urban settlements
declined in population, although several towns and cities
increased dramatically in size during the same period,
especially those associated with oil and natural gas
production in western Siberia and the Volga-Urals regions. The
population in several towns in the North Caucasus area
increased rapidly in the 1990s as a result of the inflow of
refugees from war-torn Chechnya.
During the Soviet period thousands of ethnic Russians migrated
to other Soviet republics. This trend began to reverse in the
mid-1970s, and since the dissolution of the USSR in 1991
ethnic Russians have returned to the Russian Federation in
even larger numbers. Southwestern Russia (from the North
Caucasus to southwestern Siberia), Moscow, and Saint
Petersburg have been the main destinations for immigrants.
Foreign nationals, such as Chinese, have immigrated to far
eastern Russia and large cities in European Russia in
comparatively small numbers.
IV. Economy
The Soviet Union had a planned
socialist economy, in which the central government controlled
everything from production planning and prices to
distribution. The Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe
had planned economies as well. After the breakup of the USSR,
Russian reformers were confronted with the daunting task of
building a modern capitalist economy while simultaneously
striving to create a democratic state based on effective laws
and reliable administrative structures. The collapse of
Communism in Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and the
dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991 disrupted
the close economic relations Russia had previously enjoyed
with neighboring Communist states and other Soviet republics.
Political turmoil and uncertainty inside the Russian
government also contributed to the country's economic woes.
Compared with most of the former planned economies of Eastern
Europe, Russia experienced an unusually severe and protracted
drop in officially reported economic output.
By 1998 the traditional emphasis on heavy industry, especially
military output, had shifted sharply toward consumer needs and
services, and a few signs indicated that the economy had begun
to grow for the first time in nearly a decade. Russia's vast
natural resources and highly educated workforce also enhanced
the prospects for a successful transition to capitalism.
However, certain governmental and market institutions
necessary to generate long-term investment and
entrepreneurship had not yet been firmly established, leading
some experts to predict that steady economic growth would be
impossible for Russia to sustain.
According to the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (World Bank), Russia's gross domestic product
(GDP) in 1998 totaled $276.6 billion. Services accounted for
57 percent of the GDP, while industry, which includes
manufacturing, mining, electricity generation, and
construction, accounted for 35 percent. The agricultural
sector, including forestry and fishing, contributed 8 percent.
V. Government
The Russian Federation became an
independent state in December 1991 as a result of the collapse
of the USSR. During the Communist era the Russian Soviet
Federated Socialist Republic (RSFSR) was the largest of the
USSR's 15 republics. The present Russian Federation occupies
the same territory as the former RSFSR. Since independence,
Russia has adopted a new constitution and system of
government.
Russia is a federal and presidential republic governed under a
constitution that took effect in 1993, replacing the 1978
constitution of the RSFSR. The central government is composed
of three independent branches: the executive (the president
and prime minister), legislative (the Federal Assembly), and
judicial. The government is responsible to the president, and
the executive branch is considerably more powerful than the
other two branches. The constitution is largely the creation
of Russian president Boris Yeltsin, who dominated Russian
politics from independence until his retirement from politics
in 1999. Yeltsin was elected the RSFSR's first president by
popular vote in June 1991, and he retained this position in
Russia after the Soviet Union dissolved later that year. In
June 1996 he was reelected to a second four-year term, but he
resigned the presidency in December 1999.
To some extent presidential decrees can take the place of
laws, thereby evading legislative scrutiny. Furthermore, the
legislature has only limited rights to investigate government
activity. Nevertheless, the legislature can reject the budget,
draft legislation, publicize government errors and
malpractice, and, at the price of its own dissolution and new
parliamentary elections, bring down the government by repeated
votes of no confidence.
|
|
|

Kremlin Palace

Ural

Red Square

Lake Baikal
|
|
|
|