Putinism and Modern Authoritarianism: Governance, Society, and War

Harvard Extension School

GOVT E-1085

Section 1

CRN 17539

View Course Details
Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine has renewed attention to authoritarian politics, but it also raises a deeper question: how do modern authoritarian regimes maintain stability while undertaking high-risk policies. This course examines the political system commonly described as Putinism and uses it as a framework for understanding contemporary authoritarian governance. It begins with the war in Ukraine and introduces competing explanations of Russian behavior, including geopolitical, leadership-centered, and institutional perspectives. The course then provides the historical and institutional foundations needed to evaluate these explanations. Students analyze how the Russian regime combines centralized political control with delegated governance across regions, economic actors, and civil society. Key topics include the power vertical, patronal networks, conditional property rights, managed participation, and informational control. In the final part of the course, students return to the war as a stress test of the system, evaluating how wartime pressures affect regime stability, civic life, and economic governance. The course emphasizes the application of theoretical concepts to real-world developments and encourages students to critically engage with competing interpretations of Russian politics.

Instructor Info

Irina Busygina, PhD

Associate of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University


Meeting Info

M 11:00am - 1:00pm (8/31 - 12/19)

Participation Option: Online Asynchronous or Online Synchronous

In online asynchronous courses, you are not required to attend class at a particular time. Instead you can complete the course work on your own schedule each week.

Deadlines

Last day to register:

Notes

This course meets via web conference. Students may attend at the scheduled meeting time or watch recorded sessions asynchronously. Recorded sessions are typically available within a few hours of the end of class and no later than the following business day. See minimum technology requirements.

All Sections of this Course

CRN Section # Participation Option(s) Instructor Section Status Meets Term Dates
17539 1 Online Asynchronous, Online Synchronous Irina Busygina Open M 11:00am - 1:00pm
Aug 30 to Dec 18