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Showing 1 - 2 results of 2 for search '"1905 Revolution"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 1
    by Schapiro, Leonard, 1908-1983
    Published 1960
    Table of Contents: “…The formative years -- The "economist" controversy -- The birth of Iskra and the Second Congress -- Lenin against Iskra : the 1905 Revolution -- Attempts at reunion -- The First and Second Dumas -- Towards the final split -- Lenin overplays his hand -- War and revolution -- From Lenin to Stalin -- The road to power -- The Party in the Civil War -- The Communist rule under threat -- Lenin's conflict with his colleagues -- Party composition and machinery : 1917-1922 -- Control over the Provinces : Army and legal machinery -- Conflicts among the leaders : first phase -- The defeat of Trotsky -- Party composition : relations with the government -- Army and security : industry and the peasants -- Intellectual life : the Party at home and abroad -- The Third Revolution -- The defeat of Bukharin -- The Third Revolution -- Stalin's victory over the Party -- The climax of the purge -- Composition and structure : 1929-1941 -- The Party and the nation (the State : agriculture and industry : culture : doctrine : religion) -- The non-Russian peoples : foreign relations -- The War : Party control over the Army -- The aftermath of the War (industry : agriculture : Party composition) -- Intellectual tribulations. …”
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  2. 2
    by Mignon, Carlos, Gaido, Daniel
    Published 2018
    “…In this article we will describe the attempts made by Russian Tsarism to artificially create a trade union bureaucracy under the aegis of the police between 1898 and 1905. The peculiarity of the Russian experience during the years immediately prior to the 1905 revolution resides in the fact that it did not take place, as was usually the case in other countries, by granting workers freedom of strike, assembly and association and through the gradual cooptation of their ruling stratum by the bourgeois state, but as a result of an initiative of the Ministry of the Interior, and within it of the Secret Police (Okhrana), as opposed to the official policy of Tsarism, which did not legalize the unions until 1906, as well as that of the Ministry of Finance, which controlled the factory inspectorate and was particularly sensitive to the pressures of the capitalists. …”
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