This book explores the role of coercion in the relationship between
the citizens and regimes of communist Eastern Europe. Looking in
detail at Soviet collectivisation in 1928-34, the Hungarian
Uprising of 1956 and the Polish Solidarity Movement of 1980-84, it
shows how the system excluded channels to enable popular grievances
to be translated into collective opposition; how this lessened the
amount of popular protest, affected the nature of such protest as
did occur and entrenched the dominance of state over society.
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