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The Watchful State - Security Police and Opposition in Russia, 1906-1917 (Hardcover, New)
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The Watchful State - Security Police and Opposition in Russia, 1906-1917 (Hardcover, New)
Series: NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Why did the imperial Russian government fail to prevent revolution
in 1917? Were its security policies flawed? This broadly researched
study of Russia's security police investigates the government's
efforts to maintain order as it struggled against political
opposition and threats of violence during the last decade before
the Revolution. Historian Jonathan Daly brings to life the men who,
often with reformist intentions, took on the task of defending
Russia against political dissent and revolution from within. The
Watchful State reveals how the security police matched wits with
revolutionary activists under Russia's first constitutional
government, from 1906 until the collapse of order in 1917. The
secret police kept a watchful eye on a large number of the radical
political activists who threatened the state order. Such constant
scrutiny enabled the secret police frequently to disrupt plots
against the government, to set snares to trap conspirators, and to
hold the workers' movement within bounds. The security police
rarely harassed liberal and moderate activists during the
constitutional era, though the regular police administration was
not so restrained. The two institutions of law enforcement worked
together, forming a security system with one primary goal: to
thwart antigovernment forces seeking to undermine the political
status quo. Countless times, Russia narrowly escaped breakdowns of
order, thanks to the intervention of the police who thwarted
political assassinations, troop mutinies, and urban unrest. Yet
security police activities were not without cost to the established
order. As the educated public expanded and an awareness of civil
society grew, tolerance for secretive and often intrusive security
apparatus waned. In its battle against its revolutionary
adversaries, the late imperial government lost the broader struggle
for the hearts and minds of Russians.
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