Description |
1 online resource (xii, 353 pages) : illustrations (some color), map |
Contents |
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Figures and Tables -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Note on Terms and Usage -- Introduction -- PART I Negotiating Terror and Social Discipline in the 1930s -- 1 Controlling the Soviet Family through Alimony? Righteous Women, Starving Children, and Bad Fathers, 1925-1939 -- 2 Nashi/ne Nashi: Individual Smallholders, Social Control, and the State in Ziuzdinskii District, Kirov Region, 1932-1939 -- 3 Social Control in the Workplace: Labour Discipline and Workers' Rights under Stalin -- 4 "Such Was the Music, Such Was the Dance": Understanding the Internal and External Motivations of a Stalinist Perpetrator -- PART II Forging Society in War and Peace -- 5 Soviet "Hard Labour," Population Management, and Social Control in the Post-war Gulag -- 6 The Protection of Socialist Property and the Voices of "Thieves" -- 7 "They Are Afraid": Medical Surveillance of Reproduction and Illegal Abortions in the Soviet Union, 1944-1953 -- PART III Post Stalin: Trajectories of Social Control -- 8 From the Street to the Court (and Back): Juvenile Delinquency in the 1950s -- 9 After the XXth Congress: Liberalization and the Problem of Social Order -- 10 From Mass Terror to Mass Social Control: The Soviet Secret Police's New Roles and Functions in the Early Post-Stalin Era -- 11 Social Control in Post-Stalinist Courts: Housing Disputes and Citizen Demand of Legality -- 12 Soviet Socialisms: From Stalin to Khrushchev -- Contributors -- Index |
Summary |
"Under Stalin, the Soviet state used mass executions, forced deportations, and the Gulag prison system as tools to control the behavior of its citizens. However, while these activities were the most visible aspects of the regime's repression they were only one aspect of a larger experience of social control: the enforcement of social norms and the punishment of deviance from them. Such social control did not just come from above. Stalinist subjects themselves made legal claims based on their own interests, whether that meant suing for alimony, divorce, or damages, or initiating criminal cases on their own behalf. This volume assembles the latest research on a wide range of actors in the Stalinist system and the variety of ways of policing social and individual behavior. That includes essays on the Gulag and mass terror, but also juvenile delinquency, housing and property disputes, abortion, and alimony. The editors draw this together through the concept of "social control," which they draw from the scholarly literature in sociology and criminology. They have outlined a framework which should make the book useful to a wide range of Soviet and post-Soviet historians as well as scholars researching legal, sociological, and political aspects of modern authoritarian regimes."-- Provided by publisher |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on September 18, 2023) |
Subject |
Stalin, Joseph, 1878-1953 -- Influence
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Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971 -- Influence
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SUBJECT |
Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971 fast |
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Stalin, Joseph, 1878-1953 fast |
Subject |
Social control -- Soviet Union -- History
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Social norms -- Soviet Union -- History
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Police -- Soviet Union -- History
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Criminal law -- Soviet Union -- History
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Punishment -- Soviet Union -- History
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HISTORY / Russia / Soviet Era
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Criminal law
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Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
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Police
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Punishment
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Social control
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Social norms
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Social policy
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SUBJECT |
Soviet Union -- Social policy
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Subject |
Soviet Union
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Genre/Form |
History
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Rebitschek, Immo, editor.
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Retish, Aaron B., editor.
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ISBN |
1487544235 |
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9781487544317 |
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1487544316 |
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9781487544270 |
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1487544278 |
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9781487544232 |
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