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This book analyses the development of Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) as
an outstanding Marxist thinker and socialist politician in the era
of imperialism and revolution. Identifying the driving force behind
Luxemburg's development as the deep unity between her passionate,
emphatic life and her political and theoretical work, the authors
retrace the inner dynamics of its different stages while
highlighting the deep rupture caused by the experience of the
Russian Revolution. On the basis of new publications of her Polish
works and other writings, Luxemburg's strategic approaches are
located in an Eastern European context. The authors discuss
Luxemburg's unique analyses of the first experiments in socialist
participation in government, of the first Russian revolution and of
the forms of accumulation of capital to outline the foundations of
her novel understanding of both democratic-socialist revolution and
of a society that would point beyond social democracy as well as
Bolshevism - a vision that will gain new significance in the twenty
first century. This book looks upon the lasting heritage of Rosa
Luxemburg as the groundbreaking thinker of the unity between
democracy and socialism.
Translated from the original German Lenin Neuentdecken and
available in English for the first time, this volume rediscovers
Lenin as a strategic socialist thinker through close examination of
his collected works and correspondence. Brie opens with an analysis
of Lenin's theoretical development between 1914 and 1917, in
preparation for his critical decision to dissolve the Constituent
Assembly in January 1918 in a struggle for power. This led from the
dialectics of revolutionary practice and social analysis to a new
understanding of socialism, which is compared and contrasted to the
alternative Marxist ideas and conceptions of the state posited by
Karl Kautsky and Rosa Luxemburg. Rediscovering Lenin then moves to
1921, when Lenin begins a new stage of his theoretical development
concerned with resolving the reversal of the revolution's aims and
its results. This process remains unfinished, and the questions
raised a hundred years ago remain: How can one intervene
successfully and responsibly in social and political crises? What
role do social science theories, ideological frameworks, and other
practices play in transforming the economic, political and cultural
power structures of a society? Brie concludes with a retrospective
on the ideas developed by Marx and in the Second International, and
their impact on Lenin's strategic thinking. Placing Lenin's writing
itself in the foreground and arguing from inside his own
self-learning, Rediscovering Lenin focuses on the reflective
relationship between ideology, theory, and practice.
Focusing on the vastly different outcomes of post-Soviet regime
transitions, this study explores why some societies have become
more democratic and some have not. Based on in-depth comparative
analyses, the book assesses political developments in six of
Russia's regions (Saratov, Nizhnii Novgorod, Volgograd, Ryazan',
Ul'yanovsk, and Tver' oblasts) since 1988. The authors consider the
influence of Soviet governance systems on the emergence of
cleavages and new actors in the post-Soviet period. They also
analyze the impact of institutional changes on regional regimes and
the success or failure of formal institutions as a framework for
political competitiveness. Placing their detailed field data within
the larger comparative and theoretical context of political
transitions, the authors are able to explain the mixed outcomes of
post-communist regime change in Russia and other post-Soviet
nations. With its innovative model of path-contingent
democratization and its new typology of political regimes and
regime transitions, this book will be essential reading for all
scholars of democracy.
According to the Constitution of the Russian Federation, adopted in
1993, local autonomy is one of the fundamental principles of the
constitutional system. The Politics of Local Government in Russia
aims to provide a dedicated and comprehensive discussion of the
pursuit of local self-government in contemporary Russia where
"local" refers to the third tier of government beyond federal and
regional governments. Some of the ablest scholars in the field
focus on the existing institutional and social climate for
municipal and district level government in Russia while placing
recent reforms in a comparative and historical perspective.
This book analyses the development of Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) as
an outstanding Marxist thinker and socialist politician in the era
of imperialism and revolution. Identifying the driving force behind
Luxemburg's development as the deep unity between her passionate,
emphatic life and her political and theoretical work, the authors
retrace the inner dynamics of its different stages while
highlighting the deep rupture caused by the experience of the
Russian Revolution. On the basis of new publications of her Polish
works and other writings, Luxemburg's strategic approaches are
located in an Eastern European context. The authors discuss
Luxemburg's unique analyses of the first experiments in socialist
participation in government, of the first Russian revolution and of
the forms of accumulation of capital to outline the foundations of
her novel understanding of both democratic-socialist revolution and
of a society that would point beyond social democracy as well as
Bolshevism - a vision that will gain new significance in the twenty
first century. This book looks upon the lasting heritage of Rosa
Luxemburg as the groundbreaking thinker of the unity between
democracy and socialism.
Translated from the original German Lenin Neuentdecken and
available in English for the first time, this volume rediscovers
Lenin as a strategic socialist thinker through close examination of
his collected works and correspondence. Brie opens with an analysis
of Lenin's theoretical development between 1914 and 1917, in
preparation for his critical decision to dissolve the Constituent
Assembly in January 1918 in a struggle for power. This led from the
dialectics of revolutionary practice and social analysis to a new
understanding of socialism, which is compared and contrasted to the
alternative Marxist ideas and conceptions of the state posited by
Karl Kautsky and Rosa Luxemburg. Rediscovering Lenin then moves to
1921, when Lenin begins a new stage of his theoretical development
concerned with resolving the reversal of the revolution's aims and
its results. This process remains unfinished, and the questions
raised a hundred years ago remain: How can one intervene
successfully and responsibly in social and political crises? What
role do social science theories, ideological frameworks, and other
practices play in transforming the economic, political and cultural
power structures of a society? Brie concludes with a retrospective
on the ideas developed by Marx and in the Second International, and
their impact on Lenin's strategic thinking. Placing Lenin's writing
itself in the foreground and arguing from inside his own
self-learning, Rediscovering Lenin focuses on the reflective
relationship between ideology, theory, and practice.
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