The classic works of comparative politics-Gerschenkron, Moore, and Skocpol, for example-were written by scholars with a keen appreciation for the politics of food supply and the relationship between the city and the countryside. Now a new team has devised a clever and compelling analysis of the same factor for our own era. Azarieva, Brudny, and Finkel offer us a timely and fresh study of food security and regime stability in Europe's most dangerous country: Russia. It is a story packed full of unexpected plot twists and lessons for policymakers and academics.
Jeffrey Kopstein , University of California, Irvine
The revival of Russian agriculture behind protectionist barriers is one of the few successes of Russia's economy in recent years, and it helps explain the resilience of the Putin regime in the face of Western sanctions. This is a definitive account of the economic strategy behind Fortress Russia.
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
This excellent volume, which expands on Janetta Azarieva's earlier doctoral dissertation, traces Russian agricultural policy from the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 until soon after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Don Van Atta, Europe-Asia Studies
The authors of Bread and Autocracy have written an accessiblemonograph that invites the reader to consider the globally critical and yet inherently fragile topic of agriculturalproduction within Russia. Food (and its scarcity) are a catalyst in Russian history, and this work fills a gap in contemporary knowledge about Russian food politics and security.
Jason A. Reuscher, CEU Review of Books