Despite numerous parallels, the Chinese and Russian Revolutions resulted in countries that had distinct social structures and modes of statedirected economic growth.
This essay makes the case that these variations in revolutionary results can be largely traced to the impact of the disparities between the sociopolitical systems and economic development patterns of the prerevolutionary societies, Romanov Russia, and late Imperial China. Not only did old-regime mechanisms survive the revolution, but they also imposed different constraints on successful revolutionary attempts to seize control of the state and use it to advance the country's growth once it had been achieved. The study contributes to sociological explanations for continuity between pre- and post-revolutionary regimes as well as for distinctions across substantially comparable revolutions.
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