Revolutionary PoliticsBloomsbury Academic, 1992年12月4日 - 176 頁 This book offers a thematic analysis of the phenomenon of revolution. The twentieth century has been witness to a number of historic revolutions, beginning with the Mexican and the Russian revolutions at the turn of the century and leading up to the Iranian and Nicaragua revolutions in the 1970s and 1980s. Despite their fundamental differences, these and the revolutions before them are characterized by parallel developments and processes. The focus of this book is to discern those social and political dynamics that bring about revolutions, determine their nature and overall direction, and in turn facilitate the emergence and success of revolutionary leaders and their attempts at institutionalizing their newly-won powers. |
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... popular legitimacy throughout society . Whereas bureaucratic - authoritarian regimes rely on the exclusion of the masses from politics , populist ones specifically aim to establish a mass - based political system . They rely on ...
... popular cultivation of a new national identity . The question of what it is to be a citizen of Russia , China , Cuba , Iran , or any other country where a revolution might have occurred assumes a completely different answer after the ...
... popular struggle . It is , in any case , one which by necessity harnesses politically inclusionary principles , ceaselessly striving to minimise any gaps that may appear between the masses and the political establishment . The ...
內容
Causes and Processes | 5 |
PostRevolutionary States | 57 |
The PostRevolutionary Polity | 101 |
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