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The USSR's Emerging Multiparty System (Hardcover)
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The USSR's Emerging Multiparty System (Hardcover)
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Throughout the history of the USSR, groups of like-minded people
have gathered, without official permission, to discuss issues of
common interest. They had their predecessors in prerevolutionary
voluntary associations and political parties. During the 1960s it
became easier and less dangerous than in the previous period of
Stalin's rule to engage in activities outside government control.
Indeed, since the de-Stalinization campaign in the 1950s, Soviet
society has been slowly asserting its independence, at least in
areas nominally nonpolitical. Nevertheless, until Gorbachev's drive
for liberalization achieved some momentum, the creation of
unsanctioned groups often continued to provoke persecution of their
members. In this book, Vera Tolz studies these unsanctioned groups
and reveals the effect they are having on the Soviet political
system. In 1990, primarily because of pressure from these
unofficial movements, the Communist party was forced to relinquish
its constitutionally guaranteed monopoly on power. In other words,
a multiparty system had emerged in the USSR by the end of the
period under observation in this book. From the time that voluntary
associations of Soviet people were permitted to emerge from the
underground and openly participate in official public life (1987),
their role in the political and social life of the country has been
rapidly expanding. By 1989, new sociopolitical groups, especially
in the Baltic republics and Transcaucasia, started to pose not only
a challenge but also a threat to the power of the Communist party.
The emergence of a multiparty system in the Soviet Union, with
various political groups pursuing different--and at times
opposing--goals, is coinciding with a period during which the
central authorities are being inconsistent in implementing
democratic reforms. Representatives of new movements are often
politically inexperienced, and the Communist party is facing a
serious crisis, which makes the political situation in the Soviet
Union highly unpredictable and highlights the difficulties that the
country faces in moving toward a more democratic system
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