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The Mensheviks in exile. Minutes of delegations of the RSDLP Abroad 1922-1951
Antoshin, Alexey
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The Mensheviks after October socialist opposition and the rise of the Bolshevik dictatorship
Brovkin, Vladimir N.
core
At the outbreak of World War One the leading Mensheviks were on various sides of the new military frontiers, and lacked a central organ through which they could inform each other of their respective responses to the war. They could, however, communicate by mail, not all of which was confiscated by the military censorship.1 In 1924 the Russian ...
Thatcher Ian D
exaly +4 more sources
The Legal Opposition the Mensheviks
None of the opposition parties which have been discussed was faced with the same problem as the Mensheviks. This party alone, of all those which opposed the Communists, set itself from the first a task which it ceaselessly pursued for four years—that of ousting them from power by strictly constitutional means.
Leonard Schapiro
exaly +4 more sources
6 Two Orientations to Hegemony: Mensheviks and Bolsheviks
The divergence between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks arose suddenly and unexpectedly in the midst of the Congress. None of the participants was fully clear as to its genesis or its import; even the principal actors saw it unfold hazily amidst the uncertainties and confusion of political struggle.
Alan Shandro
exaly +3 more sources

