The Communist Party in Post-Soviet RussiaManchester University Press, 2002 - 296 pages The focus of this book is the origin and development of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF), now Russia 's largest and most influential party, and the largest non-ruling communist party in the world today. Drawing on extensive original and primary research, March details the ideology, organisation and activity of a political phenomenon which has as yet received little in-depth analysis and over which there is currently little scholarly consensus. The study analyses the CPRF 's evolution in the context of post-Soviet political developments and makes comparisons with other Eastern European countries where left-wing parties have made strong comebacks, and shows that the party has helped stabilise the Russian political system, and argues that common perceptions of it as anti-democratic are vastly oversimplified. |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... Kuptsov , a member of the CPSU's Central Committee ( CC ) department for mass organisations and beaten by Polozkov for the party leader- ship in June 1990 ; those members of the CPSU's social democratic Democratic Platform such as ...
... Kuptsov , a member of the CPSU's Central Committee ( CC ) department for mass organisations and beaten by Polozkov for the party leader- ship in June 1990 ; those members of the CPSU's social democratic Democratic Platform such as ...
Page 35
... Kuptsov's moderate position and past association with Gorbachev was unpopular in the party and had come under ... Kuptsov and Zyuganov there- after worked in relative harmony . Kuptsov , the unambitious but skilled organiser ...
... Kuptsov's moderate position and past association with Gorbachev was unpopular in the party and had come under ... Kuptsov and Zyuganov there- after worked in relative harmony . Kuptsov , the unambitious but skilled organiser ...
Page 44
... Kuptsov rejected approaches from both sides . He refused to support Yeltsin in a phone call on 20 August 1991 , but ... Kuptsov's role in co - ordinating the first attempts to challenge Yeltsin's decrees , see PR , 3-10 December 1997 ; I ...
... Kuptsov rejected approaches from both sides . He refused to support Yeltsin in a phone call on 20 August 1991 , but ... Kuptsov's role in co - ordinating the first attempts to challenge Yeltsin's decrees , see PR , 3-10 December 1997 ; I ...
Contents
Introduction 14 | 1 |
The CPRFs emergence as the dominant successor party | 12 |
the CPRFs ideological currents | 47 |
Copyright | |
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1999 elections Aleksandr Author's interview authoritarian Basingstoke Belarus Bindyukov bloc campaign Carnegie cent centrist communism Communist Party Communist Studies Congress CPRF CPRF's CPSU crisis December democracy Duma Duma elections East-Central Europe economic Edinstvo elite Europe-Asia Studies February forces Gorbachev groups hardline ideological increasingly Journal of Communist Kosolapov KPRF Kuptsov LDPR leaders leadership Lenin Leninist liberal liberal democracy London March Marxism-Leninism Marxist Marxist-Leninist McFaul membership moderate Moscow movement munist national bolshevism national-patriotic nationalist nomenklatura NPUR opposition parliamentary party organisation party's patriotism Petrov platform Podberezkin political parties position post-communist post-Soviet Pravda presidential elections programme Putin regime regional role Rossiya Russia's Communists Russian electoral Russian Politics Sakwa Seleznev Sergei Baburin social democratic socialist sought Sovetskaya Rossiya Soviet statist-patriotic strategy Studies and Transition successor parties tendencies tion traditional Transition Politics Tsentr politicheskykh Ukraine Union unity Urban and Solovei USSR Viktor vote voters www.kprf.ru Yeltsin