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Subject: Political Science  Book Title: The Soviet Elite from Lenin to Gorbachev
The Soviet Elite from Lenin to Gorbachev
The Central Committee and its Members 1917-1991
Mawdsley, Evan Professor of International History, University of Glasgow
White, Stephen Professor of Politics, University of Glasgow
Print publication date: 2000
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-829738-3
doi:10.1093/0198297386.001.0001
 
Abstract: The USSR was dominated by its ruling Communist Party, and the party was in turn dominated by a political elite that was represented in its Central Committee. Nearly two thousand individuals were members of the Central Committee between 1917 and 1991, who may be divided into four distinct political generations from the professional revolutionaries born in the late nineteenth century to the post-war generation that was beginning to enter the political elite in the Gorbachev years. There were considerable variations over time in the characteristics of the Central Committee, including the extent to which its membership was replaced at successive party congresses. But a close relationship developed between particular occupational positions and Central Committee membership, a ‘job-slot’ system that lasted until the final years of communist rule. The Central Committee as an institution was generally marginal to the political process. But it met more frequently and took more decisions in the 1920s and late 1980s, and on several occasions, its meetings were decisive in resolving leadership conflicts; they also ventilated policy alternatives, and sometimes disagreements. In the last years of communist rule, the elite sought increasingly to transform their positions of political power into the more enduring advantage of property, and this allowed many of them to maintain their elite status into the post-communist period. As well as printed sources, the study draws on recently opened party archives and about a hundred interviews with members of the Brezhnev-era Central Committee.

Keywords: archives, Central Committee, Communist Party, jobs, leadership, party congress, policy, political elite, political generation, USSR
Table of Contents
Preface
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1. Revolutionaries in Power, 1917–1923
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2. The Old Bolsheviks, Socialist Construction, and the Purges, 1923–1937
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3. Stalin's New Elite, 1939–1956
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4. Stalinist Generation, ‘Leninist Norms’, 1956–1966
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5. The Elite Consolidates, 1966–1985
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6. Challenge and Crisis, 1985–1991
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7. Elite and Society
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8. An Evolving Elite
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0198297386.001.0001
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