<P> In the Soviet Union, political studies were carried out under the guise of some other disciplines like theory of state and law, area studies, international relations, studies of labor movement, "critique of bourgeois theories", etc . Soviet scholars were represented at the International Political Science Association (IPSA) since 1955 (since 1960 by the Soviet Association of Political and State Studies). </P> <P> In 1979, the 11th World Congress of IPSA took place in Moscow . Until the late years of the Soviet Union, political science as a field was subjected to tight control of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and was thus subjected to distrust . Anti-communists accused political scientists of being "false" scientists and of having served the old regime . </P> <P> After the fall of the Soviet Union, two of the major institutions dealing with political science, the Institute of Contemporary Social Theories and the Institute of International Affairs, were disbanded, and most of their members were left without jobs . These institutes were victims of the first wave of anticommunist opinion and ideological attacks . Today, the Russian Political Science Association unites professional political scientists from all around Russia . </P> <P> In 2000, the Perestroika Movement in political science was introduced as a reaction against what supporters of the movement called the mathematicization of political science . Those who identified with the movement argued for a plurality of methodologies and approaches in political science and for more relevance of the discipline to those outside of it . </P>

Who is considered to have specialization in philosophical approach of political science