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The field of biopolitics encompasses issues from health and
hygiene, birth rates, fertility and sexuality, life expectancy and
demography to eugenics and racial regimes. This book is the first
to provide a comprehensive view on these issues for Central and
Eastern Europe in the twentieth century. The cataclysms of imperial
collapse, World War(s) and the Holocaust but also the rise of state
socialism after 1945 provided extraordinary and distinct conditions
for the governing of life and death. The volume collects the latest
research and empirical studies from the region to showcase the
diversity of biopolitical regimes in their regional and global
context - from hunger relief for Hungarian children after the First
World War to abortion legislation in communist Poland. It
underlines the similarities as well, demonstrating how biopolitical
strategies in this area often revolved around the notion of an
endangered nation; and how ideological schemes and post-imperial
experiences in Eastern Europe further complicate a 'western'
understanding of democratic participatory and authoritarian
repressive biopolitics. The new geographical focus invites scholars
and students of social and human sciences to reconsider established
perspectives on the history of population management and the
history of Europe.
How did the Soviet Union control the behaviour of its people? How
did the people themselves engage with the official rules and the
threat of violence in their lives? In this book, Immo Rebitschek
and Aaron B. Retish, along with a collection of international
scholars, examine how social control developed under Stalin and
Khrushchev. Drawing on deep archival research from across the
former Soviet Union, they analyse the wide network of state
institutions that were used for regulating individual behaviour and
how Soviet citizens interacted with them. Together they show that
social control in the Soviet Union was not entirely about the
monolithic state imposing its vision with violent force. Instead, a
wide range of institutions such as the police, the justice system,
and party-sponsored structures in factories and farms tried to
enforce control. The book reveals that the Soviet state did not
exclusively rely on violence in its efforts to transform society
and that under Khrushchev, these methods widened. It highlights how
the state leadership itself adjusted its policing strategies and
moved away from mass repression towards legal pressure for policing
society. Social Control under Stalin and Khrushchev explores how
the Soviet state controlled the behaviour of its citizens and how
the people relied on these structures.
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