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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page discussion of the Bolshevik Revolution, F.D.R.'s New Deal, and Mussolini's Facsism-- as they were significant political reforms during the 1930's, each with their own inherently positive and negative aspects/outcomes. No bibliography.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_1930refo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
opposing parties that climaxed after World War I. Three nations in which the general eras social upheaval were particularly significant were : Russia (Bolshevism), Italy (Fascism), and the United
States (the New Deal). While each of these revolutions were supported to some degree by their people, their respective causal factors and subsequent outcomes differed greatly. All three
were intended in some respect to solve the sociopolitical and socioeconomic problems of their people, yet not all three ever succeeded in actually doing so.
The Bolsheviks were a radical group of revolutionaries bent on overthrowing czarism and capitalism to eventually establish a Communist society. The Bolsheviks competed with many other parties for the leadership
of the anticzarist revolution. Evidently, it was quite clear to the Russian people that their current government was insufficient and that revolution was necessary. The question at hand, was
which revolution, or which party-- would obtain control.. The Bolsheviks employed both legal and underground tactics to advance their program, building a membership, in accordance with
Lenins specifications. From what I know, the Bolsheviks opposed World War I as an imperialist conflict in which socialists should have no part. After the revolution in 1917,
the provisional government was charged by the Bolsheviks with an unwillingness to expand the revolution in the direction of socialism. The Bolsheviks undertook this task through the soviets of workers
and soldiers. They then seized state power during that same year. In 1918, under the new name of the Communist (Bolshevik) party, they began their career as the dominant, and
later, by decree, the sole -2- political organization in the USSR. As we know from the recently-concluded "Cold War," the subsequent history of the theory and practice
...