Sharon L. Wolchik
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Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy
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published
2007
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11 editions
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Defeating Authoritarian Leaders in Postcommunist Countries
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published
2011
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8 editions
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Foreign and Domestic Policy in Eastern Europe in the 1980s: Trends and Prospects
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published
1983
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4 editions
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Women, State, and Party in Eastern Europe
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published
1985
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4 editions
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The Social Legacy of Communism
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published
1994
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3 editions
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Women in Power in Post-Communist Parliaments
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published
2009
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3 editions
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Czechoslovakia in Transition: Politics, Economics and Society
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published
1990
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3 editions
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Building a State: Ukraine in a Post-Soviet World (A Central European University Press Book)
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published
1995
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2 editions
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The birth of Czechoslovakia: Seminar on the founding of the independent Czechoslovak state
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published
1999
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Ukraine. The Search For A National Identity
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“When communist governments took over after the war, they installed their men and women at the local level and in the key ministries so that they controlled the economy, military, and police. Parties on the far right were tarred as collaborators and outlawed soon after the end of the war. The timing varied, but in all cases, noncommunist parties were either eliminated or allowed to exist under Communist Party control to mobilize sectors of the population unlikely to become members of the party.”
― Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy
― Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy
“Communism was also a system in which the leaders had little trust in those they worked with or in the population as a whole. The Soviet model was not chosen by the population, but was imposed from above.”
― Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy
― Central and East European Politics: From Communism to Democracy
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