This pioneering study focuses on an area of Soviet and socialist
studies until now largely neglected in the literature: social
change. The author contends that while most standard analyses of
communist regimes purport to be about social change, they are in
fact analyzing economic and political developments rather than
transformation in the class structure of society. Because economic
and political factors are the least stable, Brucan argues, they are
therefore the least explanatory and predictive factors if we are to
understand long term trends in the evolution of socialism. Brucan
instead explores the social forces at work in the Soviet Union,
China, and Eastern Europe--classes, professional groups, and so
on--tracing the evolution of class and class policy from the time
of the 1917 revolution through the present leadership of Gorbachev.
Students of international affairs and sociology will find in
Brucan's work important new insights into the likely future
direction of the world's major communist societies.
Beginning with a detailed historical analysis of class and class
policy in the East, Brucan examines issues such as forced
collectivization, the new working class, wage policy, the state
take-over, and KhruscheV's openings. Turning to a discussion of the
relationship between social structure and the
scientific-technological revolution, the author shows that
communist regimes in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and China
have demonstrated a deliberate and systematic pattern of
overvaluation of manual work and undervaluation of scientific and
technical work--explaining their lack of preparation for rapid
scientific and technical change. Brucan relates the historical
analysis of social change to questions about whether reforms in the
East can be achieved, arguing that no analysis of the East's
economic and political history can be fully understood without
considering social structure. In the final section, the author
addresses the current period of perestroika, suggesting that
GorbacheV's real challenge will be to dislodge the current social
structure that was consolidated in the late 1970s. He concludes
that a new class alignment in socialism has led to a crisis of the
communist party itself.
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