Revolutions: Theoretical, Comparative, and Historical StudiesJack A. Goldstone, Robert King Merton |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 87
Page 69
... social revolutions that destroyed the power of the traditional landowning aristocracy . Peasant or- ganization could arise from traditional peasant communities if they were rela- tively free from direct supervision ... SOCIAL REVOLUTIONS 69.
... social revolutions that destroyed the power of the traditional landowning aristocracy . Peasant or- ganization could arise from traditional peasant communities if they were rela- tively free from direct supervision ... SOCIAL REVOLUTIONS 69.
Page 72
... Social revolution was never deliberately " chosen . " Societies only " backed into " social rev- olutions . All modernizing agrarian bureaucracies have peasants with grievances and face the unavoidable challenges posed by modernization ...
... Social revolution was never deliberately " chosen . " Societies only " backed into " social rev- olutions . All modernizing agrarian bureaucracies have peasants with grievances and face the unavoidable challenges posed by modernization ...
Page 87
... social revolutions did not culminate in more liberal political arrangements . At opening stages of the French , Russian ( 1905 ) and Chinese Rev- olutions , landed upper - class / middle - strata political ... SOCIAL REVOLUTIONS 87.
... social revolutions did not culminate in more liberal political arrangements . At opening stages of the French , Russian ( 1905 ) and Chinese Rev- olutions , landed upper - class / middle - strata political ... SOCIAL REVOLUTIONS 87.
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
Manifesto of the Communist Party | 20 |
THE DEBATE ON MODERNIZATION | 38 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administrative agrarian bureaucracies agricultural areas army Bolivia Bolsheviks bourgeois bourgeoisie bureaucratic cadres capital capitalist central century China Chinese Communists civil communities conflict countries countryside crises crisis Cuba Cuban revolution Cultural Revolution Czechoslovakia dominant elite revolution enclosure existing export farm feudal forces foreign French Revolution FSLN gentry groups growth Hungary ideology important income increase industrial inequality institutions Iran Iranian Iranian Revolution Japan and Turkey Kuomintang labor land reform landed upper classes landlords leaders leadership liberal major Managua mass ment Mexican Mexican Revolution Mexico military mobilization modern movement Nicaragua obshchina occurred official old regime organization participation party patterns peasantry peasants percent Peru policies political popular population pressures production proletariat radical rebellion revolutionary role rural Russia sector Shah social revolutions socialist society Somoza Soviet structure struggle taxes Tehran tion traditional Turkey upheavals uprisings urban village wage workers