Communist Party of Bolsheviks as a Soviet Social Elevator in the Context of the New Economic Policy
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The authors analyze and interpret the processes that occurred during the New Economic Policy
(NEP) period in the Russian Communist Party (bolsheviks) (RCP(b)) — All-Union Communist Party (bolsheviks)
(AUCP(b)) as a “social elevator” from the standpoint of the theory of social mobility. The article takes into account
the achievements of national historiography and is based on a wide range of published and unpublished sources.
The authors reveal conditions that the party leadership imposed on those who wanted to “enter” the elevator; the
number and social composition of replacements; the mechanisms, instruments, and procedures used to carry
out movements between floors, as well as the volume of these movements; the transformation of the party as a
social elevator; and its impact on mobility in Soviet society. The authors conclude that, thanks to the mass recruitment
of workers, the height of the party pyramid quickly increased, and its structure and profile became more
complex, which increased the potential for internal mobility. The forced promotion of young Communists into
leading party bodies and the expansion of the number of party committees artificially caused upward intra-party
mobility and the formation of a new generation of middle-level elites. The use of the nomenklatura system for
appointing to the upper floors of the party hierarchy completed the process of rebuilding the RCP(b) — AUCP(b)
as a social elevator controlled by Stalin’s Central Committee. As a result, by the end of NEP, the party’s influence
social stratification in Soviet society became decisive.
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Morozova T. I., Shishkin V. I. ‘Communist Party of Bolsheviks as a Soviet Social Elevator in the Context of the New Economic Policy’, Modern History of Russia, vol. 10, no. 4, 2020, pp. 902– 932.