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Preface - Glossary - Introduction - Key - THE RULES - Decisions of
the Congress. Adopted at the I Congress of the RSDRP, March 18 -
Organizational Rules of the RSDRP. Adopted at the II Congress,
July-August 1903 - Rules of the Party. Adopted at the III Congress
of the RSDRP, April 1905 - Organizational Rules. Apoted at the IV
(Unified) Congress of the RSDRP, April 1906 - Organizational Rules.
Adopted at the V (London) Congress of the RSDRP, May 1907 - Rules
of the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party. Adopted at the VI
Congress of the RSDRP(b), August 1917 - Rules of the Russian
Comunist Party (Bolsheviks). Adopted at the Eighth All-Russian
Conference of the RKP(B), December 1919 - Rules of the Russian
Communist Party (Bolsheviks) Section of the Communist
International. Adopted at the Twelfth All-Russian Conference of the
RKP(B), August 1922 - Rules of the All-Union Comunist Party
(Bolsheviks) Section of the Communist International. Adopted at the
Fourteenth Congress of the AUCP(b), December 1925 - Rules of the
All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) Section of the Communist
International. Adopted at the XVII Congress of the AUCP(b),
February 1934 - Rules of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks)
Section of the Communist International. Adopted at the XVIII
Congress of the AUCP(b), March 1939 - Rules of the Communist Party
of the Soviet Unmion. Adopted at the XIX Congress of the CPSU,
October 1952 - Rules of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
Adopted at the XXII Congress of the CPSU, October 1961 - Rules of
the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Adopted at the XXVII
Congress of the CPSU, February-March 1986
Stalinism and its origins became a hot political issue in the last
days of the Soviet Union and remains a question of abiding
importance and concern for those interested in Russian affairs. The
aim of this book is to survey the literature dealing with
Stalinism, provide a rounded analysis of what Stalinism means, and
suggest a line of investigation to be pursued if we are to
understand the origins of the system. An update of the first
edition in light of the opening of the Soviet archives and recent
scholarship, this book surveys arguments about the origins of the
Stalinist phenomenon. It discusses the way in which the different
faces of Stalinism (economic, social, cultural and political)
changed over time, and shows how the fall of the USSR was connected
to the nature of Stalinism.
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