Abstract

In the article, the guest editor Piotr Dutkiewicz and editor-in-chief Yuriy M. Pochta introduce the current issue of the journal, interpreting cross-cutting topics such as democratic development and the construction of national identity in the societies of the East and the West. They believe that the most appropriate heuristic explanation for these issues today is the idea that after the end of the Cold War the hopes for the final victory of the liberal democratic project on a global scale ended in disappointment. The end of history never took place, just like the victory of communism did not take place previously. All these years we have been witnessing an imitation of liberalism, the era of which is already over. There is currently a global revolt against the liberal imitation imperative. From this point of view, there is a great interest in articles devoted to Russian-Turkish relations, the place of the Central Asian states in the international rankings of democratic development, the evolution of the political development of the Lebanese Republic, the formation of democratic political regimes in such Eastern European EU member states as Poland and Hungary, the role of parties in the political life of Great Britain and Nigeria, as well as such theoretical and methodological problems of political science as the processes of forming future political leaders, methodology of the study of GR-management and approaches to the study of the political and psychological characteristics of the heads of Russian regions. In general, this issue of the journal pictures the current state of democratic development of Western and non-Western countries in the context of globalization, which is at the stage of transition from American monopolarity to multipolarity, from imitation of the Western liberal-democratic project to the search for its own development projects. The authors believe that from the point of view of Russia and its interests the materials of this issue allow for outlining the prospects for further research on ways to build the most effective relations with world and regional powers, the possibilities of protecting its sovereignty and its geopolitical interests, and the mechanisms for forming the Russian post-Soviet identity at the national and regional levels.

Highlights

  • In the article, the guest editor Piotr Dutkiewicz and editor-in-chief Yuriy M

  • In order to explain the contents of our journal, we would like to refer to the ideas expressed by Bulgarian political scientist Ivan Krastev and American lawyer Stephen Holmes in their book “The Light That Failed: Why the West is Losing the Fight for Democracy”. They consider that the hopes for a complete and final victory of the liberal-democratic project on a global scale after the end of the Cold War ended in disappointment: “Liberalism ended up the victim of its heralded success in the Cold War” [Krastev, Holmes 2019:16]

  • Post-Soviet Russia made one of its first attempts at independent participation in world politics in 2015, combining diplomatic efforts with the use of its armed forces in order to stop the destabilization of statehood in Syria and to counter international terrorism

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Summary

Introduction

The guest editor Piotr Dutkiewicz and editor-in-chief Yuriy M. Issues of democratic development and construction of national identity at the end of the age of imitations: Editorial introduction. RUDN Journal of Political Science, 23(3), 339–347.

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