JPRS ID: 10555 USSR REPORT POLITICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL AFFAIRS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8
Release Decision: 
RIF
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
31
Document Creation Date: 
November 1, 2016
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
REPORTS
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8.pdf2.03 MB
Body: 
APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-8 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/ 10555 1 June 1982 USSR Re ort p POLITICAL ~?ND SOCI~LOGICAL AFFAIRS (FOUO 17/82) _ FBIS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY � APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 NOTE JPQS publications contain information pr imarily from foreigz newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials frc~m foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. ~ Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets ' are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] or [ExcPrpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Urfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. W~rds or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but h ave been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or at.titudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE QNLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540070001-8 JPRS L/10555 1 June 1982 USSR REPORT POLITICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL AFFAIRS _ cFOVO i~/s 2 ~ CONTENTS ~ NATIONAL 'Third Rome' Theme Raised, Discussed (Ya. N. Shchapov; VOPROSY ISTORII, Mar 82) 1 Philosophy Journal on Importance of Militant Atheism (VOPROSY FILO50FII, Mar 82) 3 Volume on Statistic al Sources for Study of Soviet Society Reviewed (Yu. V. Arutyunyan, A. A. Susokolov; VOPROSY ISTORSI, Mar 82) 6 New Book Sees Administrative Role for Labor Collectives (V. A. Maslennikov; SOVETSKOYE GOSUDARSTVO I PRAVO, Apr 82) 10 Ethnodemographic Sourcebook Reviewed (A. Ya. Shevelenko; VOPROSY ISTORII, Mar 82) 14 New Historians in Soviet A~aderr~y of Sciences (VOPROSY ISTORIIy Mar 82) 20 All-Union Conference of Jurists Reported (SOVETSKOYE GOSUDARSTVO I PftAVO, Apr 82) 2L~ Book on Soviet Rituals Reviewed (V. A. Zots; VOPROSY FIIASOFII, A4ar 82) 2? - a - [III - USSR 35 FOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL 'THIRD ROME' THEME RAISED, DISCUSSED Moscow VOPROSY ISTORII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 pp 150-151 [Report by Ya. N. Shchapov on "The International Seminar 'From Rome to the "Third Rome" ] [ExcerptJ During 21-23 April 1981 a seminar on the history of the political ideas _ in ancient and medieval Europe was held on that Gopic. Its purpose was the study of the history of political ideas and legal institutions in which conceptions about the significance of Rome in the ancient and medieval world found reflection, a~ well as about the t~,:ansfer of the political and ideological center of the empire from Rome --after its conquPst by the barbariana in the Sth century--to Constanti- nople ~the "Second Rome"), and also the study of the spirituai-political ideas which arose after the fall of Constantinople t~ th~ onalaught of the Ottoman Turks in the 15th century and ascribed to Moscow, the capital of the Russian state, the significance of the "Third Rome". The seminar was organized by the University of Rome. Participants included scholars from socialist and capitalist countries. The seminar was chaired by I. Irmscher, corresponding member of the GDR Academy of Sciences. Besides Italian scholars, papers and reports were presented by represen- - tatives.from Austria, Bulgaria, the GDR, Greece, West Berlin, Cyprus, Rumania, the ' USSR, France, and Yugoslavia. The history of Russian political canceptions and links of Russia with Rome and Byzantium were examined in papers of Soviet scholars. Z. V. Udal'tsova, corre- sponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences, in a paper entitled "Ancient Russia Between Rome and Constantinople" presented at the first plenary session, demonstrated the closP relations of the Ancient Russian state with the countries of Western Europe and with Byzantium in the sphere of culture and art, noting th-~ special role of Byzantium in the transfer of the heritage of antiquity of the ancient states of Europe to Russia. The paper of V. T. Pashuto, correspondir,g - member of the USSR Academy o~ Sciences, was devoted to the subject of "Moscc.w-- the 'ThirdRome' (The Historiographical Aspect of the Problem)". It examir.ed the history of the political ideas of the Russian state of the 14th-16th cen.~~uries and the place of the theory of "Moscow--the 'Third Rome which occup:~ed a sub- ordinated place among them and lost its significance toward the end cr the 17th century. In a paper entitled "The Ancient-Roman Calendar Tradition in Russia in the llth-14th Centuries", Ya. N. Shchapov showed that ~n Russia, ~;~hich was the heiress of the civilization of antiquity and the acientific kno4~ledge developed in Rome, a unique all-European calendar was created in the 14th century, which 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY combined. the systems of time calculation disseminated in Eastern and western Europe. , In the discussion of the problems of the history of Russian social thought and its place in the system of the political thought of the European countries foreign historians also took part. M. Arranz (Italy) called attention to the ritual of anointing during the coronation of Ivan IV, so different from the Byzantine tradi- tion, and explained it by the fact that Metropolitan Ma~arius "did notdare to imitate Constantinople". L. Ronki de Micelis (Italy) reported on the Italian (evidently Toskana) treatise "Notes on I~uscov!~r:' mf~:the year 1722, which was . directed against the recognition of the imperial title for Peter I. M. Skadutto (Vatican) spoke about the political ideas of Antonio Possevino connected with the acceptance of the title of tsar by Ivan IV. A. Tamborra (Italyi devoted his paper - to the subject of "Moscow~--the 'Third Rome' in the Social Thought of Russia During the l8th-19th Centuries. The seminar made it possible to begin a comparison of the political and legal con- ceptions of inedieval Europe developed in various countries. A decision was adopted about th e continuation of its work. It is int~nded that the papers and reports , presented at the seminar will be published. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Pravda", "Voprosy istorii", 19�i2 ~ 8970 CSO: 1800/445 2 , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R004500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL PHILOSOPHY JOURNAL ON IMPORTANCE OF MILITANT ATHEISM Moscow VOPROSY FILOSOFII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 pp 3-16 [Article: "A Fighting Program of Creative Marxism"] [Excerpt] The struggle against bourgeois ideology, V. I. Lenin stated, is a component part of the single process of thQ formation of a scientific Marxist worldview and a communist consciousness in the broad working masses of socialist society, which is impossible outside of the complete liberation of people from _ various kinds of prejudices and outmo3sd, unacientific philosophical views, and outside of a struggle against alien philistine private-property feelings, and against the survivals of the past in the consciousness of people, including religious survivals. A relentless fighter against all forms of social and _ spiritual oppression, in his struggle against religion and against religious prejudices, Lenin called for a resolute rejection of an abstract enlightenment approach to it. "We have to struggle against religion. This is the ABC of all ~ materialism and, consequently, of Marxism," V. I. Lenin stated. "But Marxism is not a materialism which has stopped with the ABCs. Marxism goes further. It says: You have to know how to fight against religion, and to do this you have to give a materialist explanation of the source of beiief and religion among the masses. The struggle against religion must not be limited to an abstract ideo- logical sermon, it must not be reduced to such a sermon; thi:: struggle ~as to be tied to the concrete practice of the class movement which is direct~ad towards the elimination of the social roots of religion."* It is not accidental tha~ Lenin understoo3 the propagandizing of materialism as a militant materialism in the first place as the defense and championing of its atheistic meaning, as the defense, championing, and development of militant atheism. V. I. Lenin regarded the practical implementation of the principles of - ~ilitant materialism and militant atheism as two of the most important aspects of a single task of communists in their struggle for the dissemination of Marxist - ideology among the masses--the propagandization and establishment of a scientific materialist worldview. It is this worldview which ensures the conscious partici- *V. I. Lenin, "Complete Works," Vol 17, p 418. ' 3 FOIt OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-8 EOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY pation by the workers in the revolutionary transformatiori of s~cial relations, and it is impossible without overcoming religious survivals, and without the effective drganization of scientific atheistic propaga:~da. This propaganda, in Lenin'e conception, should make thorough use of the heritage of the 18th century athei~ts, it should be combative, witty, talented, and candid, should be based on the latest achievements of modern science, and, moreover, should not simply retell scientific facts, but make the most powerful use of them for a struggle against the deception and prejudices on which religion maintains itself. the ~ masses have to be given the most diverse materials in atheigtic propaganda," V. I. Lenin noted. "They have to be made acquainted with facts fxom the most diverse field~ of life and approached from various angles in order to interest them, awaken them from their religious sleep, shake them from the most different sides, with the most diverse methods, and so forth."* Scientific atheistic propaganda has to be concrete; it does not tolerate cliches and general phrases; it has to be conducted intelligently, passionately, and humanely, for during the course of it and as a result of it the masses have to be made interested in a conscious attitude toward religious questions, made conscious critics of religion. A further strengthening of the material and spiritual foundations of developed cocialist society and the formation of a Marxist-Leninist worldview among the uroad masses of workers creates favorable conditions f.or a strengthen- ing of atheistic education. It is also acqiiiring especial importance in connec- tion with the exacerbated ideological and political struggle on the world arena, and the use of religious slogans by the reactionary forces. Unfortunately, shortcomings are still to be met with in our scientific atheistic ~ work. Scientific atheistic propaganda is lacking in aggressiveness and concrete- ness, and is doing a poor job in unmasking the harm of religion for society and the individual and attempts by the church to adapt to contemporary conditions and speculate on difficulties in life and cases of an indifferent attitude toward man. To date, fundamental works have not been created on the history and theory of atheism, a criticism of religion, and the practice of scientific athe.istic propaganda, and there are not enough highly qualified cadres of atheists. In this direction also a large amoun~ of work will have to be performed by our entire ideologica~ front, including the periodical VOPROSY FILOSOFII. Atheistic work has to be conducted by the method of persuasion, all of the diverse forms and means of ideological political influences, including individual work with belie- vers, has to be used in it, and the point of departure has to be Lenin's proposi- tion that the struggle against relig?on has to be waged with extreme caution. Those who bring an insult to religious feelings into this struggle do a great deal of harm.** Religious faith is overcome not simply by knowledge and, es- pecially, not by formally presented knowledge. The real overcoming of religious *V. I. Lenin, "Complete Works," Vol 45, p 26. **V. I. Lenin, "Complete Works," Vol 37,. p 186. 4 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040500074001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY faith is achieved by means of the scientifically substantiated persuasion of people, and the replacement of their religious faith with scientific convictiona. Moreover, in this process opinion ~nd conviction have to correspond to the real practice and real relations of people. Of great importance here is concrete human sympathy and concern for the daily needs of believers, for it is on this that the cler.gy has been playing in recent years. The collapse of the traditional rationalist values of bourgeois philosophy has given rise among a considerable section of the intelligentsia of the West to a gravitation toward irrationalism in general and toward religious-mystical ideas and conceptions in particular. Daocism and Shintoism, tihe "ecological" ethics of Zoroastrianism, Zen-Buddhism, Suffism, Vedanta, and the mystical ethics of Gnosticism--this is an incomplete list of those trends, which, in the opinion of various Western authors, are capable of saving contemporary civilization from the harmful influence of the scientific and technological revolutian. For this reason, a defense of science and, consequently, of scientific materialism turns out today to also be a defense of the values of rationalism, but rationalism interpreted dialectically. ~ COPYRZGHT: Izdatel'stvo TsK KPSS "Pravda", "Voprosy filosof~i", 1982 2959 ~ CSO: 1800/466 1 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-8 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL VOLUME ON STA~risTicaL souRCES FoR STUDY OF SOVIET SOCIETY REVIEWED Moscow VOPROSY ISTORII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 pp 117-120 [Review by Yu. V. Arutyunyan and A. A. Susokolov.of book "Massovyye istochniki po sotsial'no-ekonomicheskoy istorii sovetskogo obshchestva" [Mass Sourcea for the Socio-Economic History of Soviet Society] by I. D. Koval'chenko, editor, Izdatel'st- vo MGU, 1979, 374 pages] [Text] An orientation in the researc� of socio-economic history which is actively being developed now is connected with the application of mathematical methoda. The book under review makes it possible to assess the possibilities of such an arienta- tion.* It sums up, as it were, a certain stage in the development of the :'stati,- tical study of sources". We have before us one of the first works systematizing the experience of applying electronic computers in historical research. This is not simply a methodological novelty. The broad utilization of high-speed computer technology opens up a qualitatively new stage in the elaboration of a number of theoretical problems of historical science, connected above all with the possibil- ity of conducting "machine experiments". In addition, turning to electronic com- puters makes it possible to introduce into scientific circulation a number of new sources which have practicall,y not been utilized or utilized only on a very limited basis because of the extreme labor-consuming character of their processing. The worlc may be useful to all who study general problems of social development, and not only because it contains valuable information abour nass sources on the history of Soviet society ~some of which are considered in detaii. for the first time in a scientific publication). The investigation involves the aaalysis of mass socio- economic sources and focuses closely on the study of broad problema of our time by sociologists: The development of social structure and cultural processes in dif- ferent strata and groupa of society. The likeness of the problems and sources gives rise to a considerable coincidence of inethodological approaches, makes the exchange of inethodological experience in the use of sources between historians and sociologists useful, and confirms that the effective utilization of sources makes it possible to develop a more profound approach to problems of the methodology of social research as well. The task of the collective monograph, as the authors note, is, first of all, to generalize the experience of the application of mathematical-statistical methods and electronic computers in historical research, as well as to undertake a - characterization of the mass sources on the history of Soviet society, and to de- termine the future prospects of this direction in the study of sourcea. 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The monograph consists of two parts. The .first examines mass sources on the history of the population, industry, the working class and the intelligentsia, the second--sources on the history of agriculture and the Soviet peasantry. Characterized in greater detail are the professional censuses of the workinQ class. the white collar workers. and the intelliQentsia, sample budget investigations of peasant households, as wetl as sources on industry and "dynamic censuses"--investi- gations of peasant households conducted in the 1920's. The selection of the mentioned sources as the basic subject of examination seems successful. First of all, they contain a large quantity of economic and social ~ indications, which places them in the same rank with contemporary sociological re- search; secondl~, the elaboration and publication of these investigations by statistical organs are very limited, which significantly narrows the possibilities of their scientific utilization. The use of high-speed electronic computer tech- nology allows the authors to turn directly to primary statistical materials and forms of investigations. This confronts the researchers with new problems of methodology and method: The preparation of the source for machine processing, th~ construction of a representative selection from the mass of documents, the selec- tion of mathematical methods of analysis, and, finally, the complex of problems - arising from the fact that the historian in the given case is dealing with a--to him unaccustomed--form of delivery of material in the form of information and re- - gression coefficients, factor weights, etc. The solution of these problems does not relegate the traditional questions of the study of sources to a place of secondary importance: The history of the formation of the source, the change of its contents, the elaboration and publication of _ materials, the safe keeping and use of them in historical research, problems of the reliability, authenticity and comparability of data collected at different times and by different regions. In the monograph "traditional" and "non-traditional" historiographical questions appear as natural supplements to each other. One of the basic problems arising in connection with the wide use of electronic computer technology in the analysis of mass sources in historical research is the problem of the interrelationship of the empirical and theoretical levels of know- ledge. In the work with mass sources it reduces itself to the following question: Which path is more efficient--the preliminary formulation of a theoretical hypo- thesis which is then tested with the aid of statistical methods, or the "complete" analysis of the entire mass of statistical information with the aid of some kind of mettiodological approach (for example, the coefficient of information coupling used in the work) in order for the result of such an analysis to serve as the basis of the qualitative comprehension of the problem. It is evident that the combination of these methods is most fruitful, each one of them being able to have greater of smaller significance depending on the stage of the research and its basic tasks. There is no doubt, however, that in any combination of these components the theoretical comprehension of the problem is the basic goal of empirical research. The entire work is permeated by the idea th~t the application of quantitative methods strengthens the link between the analysis based on the study of sources and the solution of the concrete qualitative problem of the research. This link be- comes especially clear in those parts where the results of the statistical analysis of the source are set forth--in the examination of professional censuses and the budgets of peasant households. In both cases the problem of the internal differen- 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY tiation of the basic classes of Soviet society is the focus of the researchers. However, this problem is studied with the aid of different methods. Thus, in the _ analysis of the materials of a professional census of workers and urban employees of Russia matrices of twin relaLionships between different socio-cultural indica- tions. The latter were examined as qualitative variables, and to expose the close- ness of the statistical dependence between them coefficients were used that were based on a measure of information of joint distribution of indicators. The analysis of the twin relationships allowed the authors to elucidate the role of different factors in the differentiation of the working class. Thus, the investigators came to the conclusion that the level of the link of the workers with the soil--a factor which is assigned a significant place in intra-class differences--plays an appreci- able role only in the regions that are least developed with respect to industry, as well as in enterprises located in a rural locality. At the same time, a signif- icant role was played by such factors as the duration of the link with industry, the size of income, and others (p 151). The analysis of peasant budgets yielded interesting results. This source allows the characterization not only of the economic and social, but also the cultural ~ctivity of the peasantry ~ince it took into account cash expenditures of the peasants for all needs. Factor analysis of the ec~nomic characteristics showed clearly that gross agricultural income is the most sensitive and generalizing characteristic, which characterizes the dimensions of the peasant household in all economic-geographic regions that were examined. It is closely associated with the provision of the means of production--land, cattle, and implements. However, this characteristic characterizes the general economic state of the household with in- sufficient preciseness; a second important parameter is the size of incomes from non-agricultural trades. In addition, the for the study of the internal class structure of the peasantry of the 1920's extremely important conclusi~n was drawn concerning how the natural and climatic conditions of the various economic- geographic regions reinforced o.r weakened, but did not break the basic ties of the internal structure of the agricultural household. In characterizing the budgets, the authors noted that "the unique possibility of studying the cultural aspect of the peasants, including also the level of literacy, in connection with their membership in a certain socio-economic group, as well as the prospect of the exposure of the factors of the cultural development of the village, distinguish this source advantageously from the others" (p 288). The authors show convincin.gly that the analysis of the source with the aid of electronic computers makes it possible to approach the solution of a number of im- portant questions that were not properly illuminated in the literature, in par- ticular in what way the economic peculiarities of the peasant household determine the size of expenditures for cultural and hygienic needs. The research not only confirmed naturally-arising hypotheses, but also made possible the posing of a number of interesting questions. Thus, the conclusion presents itself naturally about the fact that both the size of gross income and the intensity of trade activity are positively associated with the magnitude of expenditures for cultural needs. However, the economic differences among households do by far not fully explain the dimensions of expenditures for cultural needs. Among the well-to-do households, the members of which are engaged in seasonal work, there is a suffi- ciently large percentage of household~ which have no (or almost no) "cultural" ex- penditures. Another fact requires explanation: The non-linear dependence of ex- penditures for cultural needs on the magnitude of income of the household, which 8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-04850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY expresses itself in the falling of the average magnitude of these expenditures in the middle peasant households compared to the poor peasant and kulak households. To explain these facts, as the authors themselves acknowledge, a more profound statistical analysis of the source is needed, in particular a study of the correla- tion of "cultural" expenditures with other socio-economic indicators. Sometimes a divergence is noted among the tasks of the research and the selected methods of analy�is of the source. For example, in the study of the structure of social generalities it is expedient to utilize the methods of the discernment of models allowing the distinction of groups of individuals or families which are most similar in terms of socio-economic and cultural parameters. Of course, the authors themselves are aware that they have by far not exhausted all the possibilities of the quantitative analysis of mass sources. But it is indis- putable that what has already been done in the book speaks to the outstanding re- sults and great possibilities of the new and important direction in the social sciences which centers around the study of sources. The systematization of the ex- perience of the use of electronic computers in the analysis of mass statistical _ sources on the socio-economic history of Soviet society makes it possible to outline the basic prospects of this direction. As is correctly noted in the woxk, the most important task is thP creation of a bank of computer information that would bring together, on the basis of common principles, the information of all sources acces- sible to investigators. The creation of such a bank will provide the possibility of combining the information of various sources within the framework of the solu- tion of a single scientific problem--which will increase the efficiency of their use many times. The concentration of presently uncoordinated information will make it possible to make wider use of the possibilities of the hypothetical-deductive approach in research and thereby to penetrate more deeply into the essence of the historical process. The possibility emerges of approaching in real earnest the construction of models of social processes. The creation of such models will not only make it possible to understand history better, but also to make more reliable forecasts of the change of social structure--which, undoubtedly, will constitute a _ new stage in the development of historical-sociological research. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Pravda", "Voprosy istorii", 1982 8970 CSO: 1800/443 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-04850R000500070001-8 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL NEW BOOK SEES ADMINISTRATIVE ROLE FOR LABOR COLLECTIVES Moscow SOVETSKOYE GOSUDARSTVO I PRAVO in Russian No 4, Apre 1982 pp 141-143 - [Review by V. A. Maslennikov, candidate in juridical sciences, of book "Trudovoy Kollektiv Kak Ob ~~Yekt i Sub" Yekt Upravleniya" [The Labor Collective as an Object and Subject of Management] edited by A. S. pashkov, Leni*_?grad, IZDATEL'TSTVO LGTJ, 1980, 118 pp] [Text] The constitutional consolidat~on of the role of the labor collective as a component element of the political system of Soviet society has stimulated an interest in a stud;? of the different aspects of its structure and functioning. On the basis of concrete materials which.were obtained during the course of the composition of draft plans for the social development of a number of Leningrad - enterprises, the monograph examines certain philosophical, sociologi~a7, . socio-psychological, and legal problems of the participation of the labor collectives of industrial enterprises in the system of social management. Among the basic points af the book, let us take note of the interpretation of the concept of the labor collective of a state enterprise with regard to whlch a generally accepted position has not yet been worked out. The authors of the section dealing with this (A. S. Pashkov and A. T. Perfil'yev), taking as their point of departure the basic ideas of the "theory of the collective" which has been put forward by A. V. Venediktov, look upon the collective of a state enter- _ prise as an objective social formation which possesses a definite organization, an internal structure, and the appropriate managerial agencies. (Pp 8-9) "An analysis of the legislation in effect and of the practice of its application," it is emphasized in the worb:, "testifies to the fruitfulness of the theory of the collectiv~ which has the advantage that it makes it possible to understand and cover the labor collective in all of its complex and diverse aspects and ~ that it provides the fullest validation of the labor collective as a subject of law." (P 56) An important aspect of this study is its thesis that the basic social functions of the collective (production-technical, socio-economic, organizational-managerial, and ideological-educational) are realized in the activities of all of the structural elements of the collective as a social organization (that is, administration, public organizations, and self-actuating agencies of the collective); moreover, with the application of both law and non-law means. (Pp 13-16, 57-58) In accordance with this, the possibility arises of studying the relationships of the labor collective with the other elements of the system of social management on the basis of recognizing ~n it the 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/42/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074401-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY quality of an independent subject of law, and a participant in an extensive range of relationships which are regulated by the norms of the various branches of law (constitutional, administrative, financial, labor, and so forth). From this there follows an important conclusion: The social functions of labor collectives are realized not only on the basis of political-ideological imperatives, but also on the basis of legal norms. The singling out of the "managerial" function as an independent function of the labar collective has occurred in the literature before; however, in the book under review this function of the collective has become pivotal in the study. The authors distinguish the following three basic organizational forma of the participation of collectives in management: a) the direct participation of workers in discussing and deciding upon state and public affairs; b) the par-- ticipation of collectives in deciding upon political, economic, and social issues - through the mediation of public organizations which have the task of expres~ing the interests of collectives; and c) the actual managerial work of the collec- tive's directing agency and of its administration. The two basic directions in which the collective's participation in management is carried out are also singled out: within the collective, in the sphere of its labor and public life; and outside of it, in its interactions with other elements of the political system, and with the institutions of socialist democracy. (P 57) By performing their manifold functions in the system of social management, labor collectives help in the realization of the leading role of the workers, especially of the working class, in society, which provides grounds for acknowledging the labor collective as having the quality of a public political institution. (P 20) An important and controversial concrete problem--the relationships of labor collectives with the territorial agencies of power and management--is examined from these positions. Proceeding from the task of increasing the role of the local soviets in ensuring the overall nature of the economic and social development of a territory, the author of the section of the book dealing with this (P. N. Lebedev) calls attention to two important points. On the one hand, he takes a critical posi- tion with regard to arguments in favor of a substantial expansion of the acti- vities of enterprises to satisfy the social needs of their members, not without grounds believing that this path of reducing labor turnover and creating stable labor collectives cannot be regarded as absolutely indisputable (since a sub- stantial improvement of social living conditions at one set of enterprises results in an increase in labor turnover at those enterprises which, because of various reasons, including those which do not depend upon the efforts of their collectives, do not have sufficient funds for housing and social and cultural construction). In the opinion of the author, a shift of the center of gravity in the struggle against labor turnover to factors which accompany labor activity (the amount of wages and working conditions, the degree to which the social and everyday needs of workers is satisfied) wi11 develop into a"luring away" of workcrs and into an increase in "collective inequality." P. N. Lebedev sees the chief stimulus for attracting a worker into production activity and maintaining 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070001-8 FOR OF~[CIAL USE ONLY the stability of labor relations in trz equalization of working and living con- ditions at all enterprises, and in a maximum curtailment of hard physical and unhealthy labor. The author correctly calls attention to the fact that sometimes in collisions between the ispolkoms of local soviets and enterprises and organizations which are not under their jurisdiction the latter turn out to be the "in~ured party." From this there follows the natural conclusion that an expansion of the juris- _ diction of the local soviets in their relationship with enterprises and organi- . zations which are not subject to their authority has to have definite limits. Incidentally, while it substantially expands the authority of the soviet in the planning of the economic and social development of territories and in ~.ontrolling the construction of housing and social and domestic objects, the 1981 decree of the CC CPSU, Presidium of the USSR Sugreme Soviet, and USSR Council of Ministers "On a Further Increase in the Role of the Soviets of People's Deputies in = Economic Construction" proceeds from a premise regarding the necessity for coordinating the positions of enterprises, organizations, and departments with those of the local soviets, without depriving enterprises, associations, and their superior organizations of the rights needed by them to effectively carry out their functions of satisfying ~he social needs of their workers.* In our view, it is an expansion of contract relationships between enterprises and organizations and the local soviets, reinforced by legal responsibility for the proper execution of these commitments, that is under present-day conditions the most effective way of ensuring the overall development of territories. Moreover, one of the central issues in improving the legal contract relationships of the local soviets with the labor collectives of enterprises and organizations of superior subordination is the establishment of the necessary responsibility of the sides, including civil legal responsibility, for the fulfillment of adopted commitments. The question of a worker's satisfaction with his work is at the center of the attention of scholars who are studying the problem of social activeness. On the basis of sociological studies which were conducted at eight L.eningrad enterprises, A. N. Sharov comes to the conclusion that an individual~s subjective attitude to- w~ird his work and~ enterprise is pervasive for all of the types of a person's activity (p 43), while Yu.',S. Suslov emphasizes the necessity for making wider use of the mechanisms of social psychological compensation in order to increase a worker's overall satisfac~ion with his work, including the degree to which the ordinary worker is involved in the management of an enterprise's affairs. ~ (P 33) The book cites the data of sociological studies which show the level of the public political preparedness of workers, the basic indicator~ and sources of * VEDOMOSTI VERKHOVNOGO SOVETA SSSR, No 13, 1981, p 436. 12 ' ?OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ their info;.~mation on the social and economic problems of the work of enterprises, and also their opinion regarding the administration's position with respect to the initiative of workers. (Pp 48-50) However, although the individual items of data are of interest, nevertheless, an integrated picture which reflects the form:., methods, and effectiveness of th~ participation of labor collectives in the management of enterprises ~.s not cr2ated. One regrets the fact that the indicators which ilave been obtained by the Leningrad sociologists are practically not compared by the authors of the book to the results of analogous question- naires which have been conducted by other researchers, which reduces the generalization level of their own data. In recent years there has been a marked increase in interest in the questions connected with the formation of labor collectives, and the selection and place- ment of leading cadres. Analyzing the legislation and practice, Ye. M. Kanevskaya takes note of a tendency toward granting primary labor collectives (teams) the right to admit ~?iew members into their midst, and she proposes the consolidation in a legislative act now being prepared on the rights of the labor collective of the rule that the hiring of wo~�kers be perfortned with the preliminary agreement of most of the members of the team, and that th~ team leader be elected by the team. (Pp 72, 75) A definite step in this direction has been taken by the 31 December 1980 Standard Regulation on the Production Team, Team Leader, Team Council, and Team Leaders'Council. It is established there _ that when new workers are included in a team the op~~nion of the tPam is taken into consideration, and that the team leader is appointed by an administration representative upon a presentation by the foreman and with regard to tl:e team's opinion.* Of course, it w~ould be desirable for a greater degree of clarity of the formulations to be reached in the future legislation, and for them to be applied to a wider range of leading cadres. The book contains a special chapter devoted to the social-psychological aspects of management in the labor collective which was written by a collective of social psychology--V. A. Bogdanov, V. Ye. Semenov, A. A. Rusalinova, and Yu. N. Yemel'yanov. From their point of view, management and self-management in the labor collective are "processes of influence on the interaci~ion and socialization of the members of a collective and ~n their social aims for the purpose of creating a united stress-resistant collective which is effective in public political and production respects." (P 89) In this connection, they examine the contents and basic indicators of the social-psychological climate in the collective, the social-psychological characteristics of the Ieader as the subject of the management of the collective, and also certain methods of their psychological preparation. The inclusion in tZ1P. book of this kind of material broadens the ideas of the legal specialist on the real social-psycho- logical mechanisms of the functioning of the labor collective and, thereby, promotes a deeper study of it. * BYULLETEN' GOSUDARSTVENNOGO KOMITETA SSSR PO TRUDU I SOTSIAL'NYM VOPROSAM, " No 4, 1981, pp 4-5. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Nauka", "Sovetskoye gosudarstvo i pravo", 1982 2959 CSO: 1800/471 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY NATIONAL - ETHNODEMOGRAPHIC SOL'RCEBOOK REVIEWED Moscow VOPKOSY ISTORII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 pp 139-142 [Review by A. Ya. Shevelenko of bo~~k "Naseleniye mira. Etnodemograficheskiy spravochnik" [Z'he Population of the World. Ethnodemographic Reference Book] by S. I. Bruk, Nauka, Moscow, 198~, 880 pages] [Text] S. I. Bruk, doctor af geographical sciences, is a specialist on ethnodemo- graphy and ethnic cartogrtsphy. Monographs on this subj~ct matter have come from his pen, as well as parts, chapters and maps in many collective worka.l The book under review is a comgrehensive reference volume. Giving a demographic survey of the world as a whole, the author citea information about the size and structure of the population: Its dynamic and reproduction, it~ growth from medieval times, the contemporary "demographic explosion", the birth-rate and death-rate, the family and age structure, the sexual ~omposition, migrations, the distribution of the population and urbanization. In regard to the ethnic picture of the world, he writes ~bout the existing ethnic communities, ethnic processes and ethnic forma- tions, the numerical strength of the peoples, their national self-consciousness, language families, racial composition, and religious views. This part of the work is concluded with summary tables containing basic geographical data about all countries, the demographic indicators of the population in each one, the largest cities, the most important peoples, the language groups, and the racial strength of the ethnic communities. In moving on to the ethnodemographic survey of the regions of the world and the countr~es separately, the author reports information ~ (arranged in approx~mately the same. colutar?s as above) on the USSR, on Europe beyond the border and on Asia be~ond the border, on Africa, America, Australia and Oceania, historical infor~r~ation being given in paragraphs about the individual peoples, including historical data about each one which explain its origin and development. The reference volume contai:ns an alphabetic list of the peoples of the earth indicating their numerical strength. All in all the book contains inf- formation on 210 countries and almost 1,400 peoples. No other specialized book published in our counzry contains anyihing similar, if you please. The population as the main productive force is illuminated in the book in two of its aspects--the ethnic and the demographic, the first one yieldirt~ in the major- ity of cases in development aiid the constants of the second one being calculated primarily for the end of the 1970's. The reference volwne contains generalized quantitative data from a mass of other sources and thus becomes a necessary aid for the historian. Specialists will constantly turn to the book by S. I. Bruk, 14 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY making intensive use of the material that fills it. The professional historian can draw a number of useful data from it: About the types of ethnic communities, beginning with the varicus family tribe formations of the primitive communal stage and ending with the eantei~~norary nations, as well as the metaethnic communities with all of their inherent processAs of consolidation, - assimilation, isolation, blending and integration (pp 71-~3); about the ways of formation of national consciousness (pp 87 ff.); about the essentially new classi- fication of the peoples of the earth adopted by the author (pp 97 ff.), which takes fullv into account the latest scientific data concerning ethnogenesi.s. Interesting are the characterizations of the historical evolution of the peoples, which are compressed but saturated with facts. This concerns chiefly the nations and nation- alities of the USSR (independent short essays on each one of them are inserted on pp 221-251), Asia beyond the borders as a whole (pp 369-545), and selectively--many regions of Africa and America. To a lesser extent this may be said about Europe beyond the borders. The reference volume well justifies its functional purpose. This is especially noticeable when it is compared with the lizerature which is close to it in subject mater. If, for example, one can find in it data about the majority of the now - existing 2,000 peoples of the earth, only a few dozen peoples each ~igure in the theoretical-methodological book by A. Yagel'skiy, in the research of V. I. Kozlov, in the manual of E. L. Shuvalov, in the scientific-popular work of V. V. Pokshishev- skiy, and in the previous reference work (a collective work) published in our country. 2 Having turned to the in part conceptually similar works of the American sociologists G. Trewartha and J. Spengler, the English demographers D. Glass and D. Eversley, C. McEvedy and R. Jones, the Italian and German statisti- cians M. Strassoldo and K. Witthauer, and, finally, to the generalizing ~ublica- tion undertaken by the United Nations,3 we become .convinced of their relatively smaller degree of completeness. If the reader would want to find compact quanti- tative material on the 272 nations with a population of over 1 million each, he would p~eviously have had to leaf through practically the entire multi-volw-ne series "The Peoples of the World", published by the Institute of Ethnography of the USSR Academy of Sciences, or to make hundreds of inquiries in different encyclo- - pedias. Now all of this is concentrated in one. The book by S. I. Bruk is basically intended to meet the needs of ethnographers and specialiGts in modern history. Therefore, it is precisely the historical part of the paragraphs concerning the past which is elaborated in less detailed fashion in the book. This circumstance gives rise to the debatability of some of its proposi- tions affecting the more remote epochs. Thus, the author notes that "the character of the migrations of the population in the last decades has rather fundamentally chan;ed. Along with economic factors, which have always played an important role in the development of migration processes, political factors are becoming of in- creasingly great significance in the determination of the direction of migrations. Sometimes migrations are caused by national and religious motives" ~p 48). This assertion is insufficiently legitimate. Previously, too, political and religious factors exerted the strongest influence on migrations. For example, after the abrogation by Louis XIV in 1685 of the Edicts of Nantes and Nimes, 400,000 Huguenots, who were being persecuted by the Catholic Church, left France and went to protestant countries. The punitive laws of the Anglican Church during 15 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-8 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 1695-1745 against the Catholics of Ireland induced a mass of Irish to move to America. One can also mention the French bourgeois revolution at the end of the 18th century, which compelled many th~usands of nobles to flee abroad, above all for political reasons. Or let us ta.ke such a grandiose migration movement as the Great Migration of Peoples during the 4th-7th r.enturies: At that time dozens of ethnic groupings were pushed out from their long-occupied places by the conquerore and, having set out on the long road, then themselves moved others, these migra- tions being by far not always caused by purely economic reasons. The prcblem of urbanization requires discussion, which affpcts a number of contro- versial aspects. It is solved by ~he combination Qf the results of investigations at the macro-, meso-, and micro-levels.4 The present reference volume, which gFneralizes mass indicators, is based mainly on the achievements of statistical macro-research. Hence the possibility of a partiallack of coincidence of the con- , clusions contained ir. it ~aitlf. the results of. the stixdy ~f c~ncr.et~ phenomena in "small scope", For examp].e, the author i.ncluded in the list of. "mi.lli.onair~- ci.tie~s" (by number of inhabita.nts) for 1975 30 ci.ties in thF Uni.ted Sta.ter with a total papulati.on ^f 94~.6 mill.ion pe~ple ~p 163), meanwhil~ nar.rowly specialized works name 27 such cities in the United States with a total population of 83 mil- lion people.5 However, the root of the variant readings, evidently, is to be found _ not in inaccuracies, but in unequal models of esti~r.~tion or in the extraordinary mobility of the urban population which call forth the transient character of such calculations even within the framework of one year. It is not entiiely clear from the text what ultimate meaning the author assigns to the concept of :~rbanization itself. The impression is cr~dLt~ t�at he simply un- derstands it to mean the browth of cities and their population. Meanwhile dif- ferent points of view on this question are expressed in the literature. Some treat urbanization as a process which consists of three stages: The initial separation of the city from the country; the further withdrawal of the rural popu- lation, leading to the growth of citie;; and the gradual liquidation of the dif- ference between town and country.6 Others focus primary attention on the socio- economic process and perceive in urbanization the concentration in cities of the highest acc?ievements of production and culture with their subsequent dissemination everywhere~ (sometimes they call the second phase indirect urbanization).8 Still others treat the given concept also by stages, but under different criteria: The growth of cities, the thickening of their network, the formation of whole systems of cities, and their amalgamation into megalopolitan units.9 Of course, a reference volume is not the place for theore*~cal discussions. We are merely speaking about the desirability of a more problem-centered organization of the rich data cited there. In some other cases one would like to see in the book a more clear-cut division of the material. Thus, for example, the part dealing with migrations (pp 48-55), which is saturated with interesting facts, is not broken down into headings-- sufficiently traditional for tl~e specialized literature--of stationary migrations (change of the permanent population), seasonal migrations, pendulum migrations (labor journeys), and non-stationary migrations,lo although the author correctly breaks down the material between external and intra-state migrations. His point of view on the sufficiently high level of purposeful regulation of migration flows in the USSR (see p 54) seems too optimistic. Unfortunately, in the meanwhile the case is somewhat different: "'rhe proportion of the popuiation which is being 16 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-8 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY moved as the result of organization still r~mains exceedingly low. The basic masses of migrants move spontane~usly, selectiag the routes of their migrations on their own responsibility and at their own risk. The migiition processes are still far from meeting national economic and public interests. Full of interesting historical and ethnographic data are the characterizations of the peoples and states of the globe, including also the ones that have been formed recently, which are inserted in r.he second part of the work. The author combines here conciseness of exposition with diversity of the cited data. Let us take, for example, Vanuatu (pp 836-838), which gained independence on 30 July 1980. It is already taken into account and the following information is reported about it: Whose colony it was and how it was administered, where it is situated, of what territories it consists, its administrative structure, general geographic data, population, ways of emigration and immigration, growth of the population, history from olden times to our day, ethnic composition, linguistic picture, and the re- ligious beliefs of the inhabitants. And so it is throughout the book. In essence, the reader received a unique publication--a one-volume encyclopedia of the peoples of the earth. FOOTNOTES 1. S. I. Bruk, "Atlas narodov mira [Atlas of the Peooles of the World], Moscow, 1964; by the same author, "Problemy kartografirovaniya v etnografii" [Problems of Cartography in Ethnography], Moscow, 1973; S. Bruk, "Die Bevoelkerung der Welt heute" [The Population of the World Today], Moscow, 1977; S. Brouk, "La population du monde aujourd'hui" [The Population of t:ze World Today], Moscow, 1980, etc. See also: "Narody Peredney Azii" [The Peoples of the Near East], Moscow, 1957; "Ocherki obshchey etnografii (Obshchiye svedeniya, Avstraliy�a i Okeaniya, Amerika, Afrika)" EEssays in General Ethnography (General Informa- tion: Australia and Oceania, America, Africa)], Moscow, 1957; "Aziatskaya chast' SSSR" [The Asiatic Part of the USSR], Moscow, 1960; "2arubezhnaya Aziya" [Asia Beyond Our Borders], Moscow, 1959; Yevropeyskaya chast' SSSR" - [The European Part of the USSR], Moscow, 1968; Materialy I mezhvedomstvennogo soveshchaniya po geografii naseleniya" [Materials of the First Inter-Department Conference on the Geography of the Population], Moscow-Leningrad, 1961; "Chis- lennost' i rasseleniye narodov mira" [Numeri~.al Strength and Settlament of the Peoples of the WorldJ, Moscow, 1962; "Narody yevropeyskoy chasti SSSR" [The Peoples of the European Part of the USSR], Vo~ I-II, Moscow, 1964; "Naseleniye mira" (The Population of the World], Moscow, 1965; "Narody Vostochnoy Azii" [The Pe~ples of East Asia], Moscow-Leningrad, 1965; "Naseleniye zemnogo chara" [The Population of the Globe], Moscow, 1965;. ":Iaseleniye cdira (osouaya chast' t. 5 Kratkoy geografiicheskoy entsiklopedii)" [The Population of the World (Special part of volume 5 of the Short Geographic Encyclopedia], Moscow, 1966; "Narody Yugo-Vostochnoy Azii" [The Peoples of South-East Asia], Dioaxoq, 1966; "Rasy i narody. Ezhegodnik" [Races and Peoples. Yearbook], Nos 1-11, Moscow, 1971-1981; "Problemy kartografirovaniya v qazykoznanii i etnografii" [Problems of Cartography in Linguistics and EthnographyJ, Leningrad, 1974; "Etnografiya v stranakh sotsializma. Ocherki razvitiya nauki" [Ethnography in the Countries of Socialism. Essays in the Development of a Science], Moscow, 1975; "Geogra- 17 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070001-8 FOR nFFICIAL USE ONLY fiya i razvivayushchiyesya strany [Geography and the Developing Countries], J Moscow, 1977; "Areal'nyye issledovaniya v yazykoznanii i etnografii" [Areal Research in Linguistics and Ethnography], Leningrad, 1978; "Issledovaniya po obshchey etnografii" [Research on General Ethnography], Moscow, 1979, and others. - 2. A. Yagel'skiy, "Geagrafiya naseleniya" [The Geography of Population], Moscow, 1980, ch II; V. I. Kozlov, "Etnicheskaya demografiya" [Ethnic Demographyj, Moscow, 1977, pp 33-47; Ye. I.. Shuvalov, "Geografiya naseleniya" [The Geography of Population], Moscow, 1977, pp 50-63; V. V. Pokshishevskiy, "Geografiya nase- leniya zarubezhnykh stran [The Geography of the Population of Foreign Coun- tries], Moscow, 1971, pp 72-82; "Narodonaseleniye stran mira. Spravochnik" [The Population of the Countries of the World. Reference Guide], Moscow, 1978, pp 370-374, 393-397. 3. D. V. Glass, D. E. C. Eversley (ed), "Population in History. Essays in Histor- ical Demography", London, 1965; G. T. Trewartha, "A Geography of Population: World Patterns", New York, 1969; by the same author, "The Less Developed Realm: A Geography of Its Population", New York, 1972; K. Witthauer, "Bevoelkerungs- zahlen im Wandel. Lawine oder Aufgabe?" [Population Figures in the Process of Change. Avalanche or Task?], Gotha, 1971; M. Strassol~o, "Lingue e nazionalita nelle rilevazioni demografiche" [Language and Nationality in Demographic Studies], Trieste, 1977; J. J. Spengler, "Facing Zero Population Growth: Re- Actions and Interpretations, Past and Present , Durham, 1978; C. McEvedy, R. Jones, "Atlas of World Population History", London, 1978; "Patterns of Urban and Rural Population Growth", Unitee Nations, Department of 'Lnternational Eco- nomic and Social Affairs, POPULATION STUDIES, No 68, New York, 1980. 4. N. T. Agafonov, S. B. Lavrov, B. S. Khorev, "Magistrali razvitiya geografii naseleniya SSSR" [Tr~e :fain Lines of Development of the Geography of the Popula- tion of the US6R], in the book "Sovremennyye voprosy geografii naseleniya" [Contemporary Questions of the Geography of ~opulation], Leningrad, 1977, p 10. 5. B. L. Ginzburg, "Millionnyye goroda mira v XX veke" [Million-Strong Cities of the World in the 20th Century], ibid, p 133. 6. B. Khorev, "Urbanizatsiya i edinaya sistema rasseleniya v usloviyakh razvitogo sotsializma "[Urbanization and a Co~non System of Settling in Conditions of Developed Socialism], in the book "Rost gorodov i sister.a rasseleniya" [The Growth of Cities and the System of Settling], Moscow, 1975, p 5. 7. 0. N. Yanitskiy, "Urbanizatsiya i nekotoryye problemy obshchestvennogo razvi- tiya" [Urbanizati~n and Some Problems of Social Development], in the book "Urbanizatsiya i formirovaniya sistem rasseleniya" [Urbanization and the Forma- tion of Systems of Settling], Moscow, 1978, p 19. 8. I. Musil, I. Link, "Urbanizatsiya v ChSSR i nekotoryye ee osobennosti" [Urban- ization in the Czech Socialist Republic and Some Its Peculiarities], in the book "Urbanizatsiya i rasseleniye" [Urbanization and Settling], Moscow, 1975, p 47. 18 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' 9. A. D. Rondeli, "Osobennosti formirovaniya regional'nykh grupp (sistem) gorodov Irana" [Peculiarities of the Formation of Regional Groups (Syatema) of Cities - in Iran], in the book "problemy geografii naseleniya i ispol'zovaniya terri- torii" [Problems of ~he Geography of Population and the Use of Territory], Tiflis, 1976, p 73. 3ee also: "Mezhdunarodnyye problemy narodonaseleniya" [International Problems of Population], Moscow, 1981. - 10. G. Merzhanov, V. Chapek, "Vidy migratsii naseleniya i ikh klassifikatsiya" [Types of Migration of Population and Their Classification), in the book "Rost gorodov i sistema rasseleniya", p 63. = 11. L. Rybakovskiy, "Kacheli migratsii" [The Swing of Migrations], PRAVDA, 11 Sep 1981. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Pravda", "Voprosy istorii", 1982 8970 " CSO: 1800/444 19 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL NEW HISTORIANS IN SOVIET ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Moscow VOPROSY ISTORII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 pp 105-107 [Text] In accordance with the Statute of the USSR Academy of Sciences, elections of inembers (academicians) and correspanding members of the USSR Academy of Sciences _ were held at its General Assembly on 28 December 1981.. Elected to membership were 44 academicians and 91 corresponding members. In the Department of History 2 - members and 5 corresponding members were elected. Elected as memb.er of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "History of the USSR" was Aleksandr Mikhailovich Samsonov, senior scientific associate of the Institute of H:i.story of the USSR of the USSR Academy of Sciences (city of Moscow), born in 1908, Raxssian, member of the CPSU, correspondent of the USSR Academy of Sciences, doctor of historical sciences, specialist in the history of Soviet socie- ty and military history, author of approximately 150 publications, including several monographs. In his works "The Great Battle of Moscow. 1941-1942," "From the Volga to the Baltic. An Essay in the History of the 3rd Guard Mechanized Corps. 1942- . 1945", "The Battle of Stalingrad. From Defense and Retreat to the Great Victory on the Volga", "The Failure of Fascist Aggression", "The Defeat of the Wehrmacht Near Moscow", and "At the Walls of Stalingrad" are characterized the greatest stages and events of the struggle of the Soviet people with the Fascist invaders. They re- search problems of the :~istory of the Second World War, reveal some of its important aspects, subject the anti-scientific conceptions of bourgeois authors to criticism, show the decisive contribution of the Soviet Union to the crushing of Hitlerite Germany and imperialist Japan, and uncover the laws which determine its victory. These books have been translated into a number of foreign languages. Under the editorship and with the participation of A. M. Samsonov, such collective monographs and collections of articles and memoirs have been published as "The Liberation of Hungary from Fascism", "The Downfall of the Hitlerite Attack on Moscow. 25 Years of the Crushing of the German-Fascist Troops Near Moscow. 1941-1966", "The Defense of Leningrad. 1941-1944. Memoirs and Diaries of Participants", "The Stalingrad Epopee", "The Liberation of Belorussia. 1944", "The Soviet Union During the Years of the Great Patriotic War. 1941-1945", "May 9, 1945. Memoirs", and others. He was a member of the Chief Editorial Council for the publication of "The History of the USSR from Ancient Times to Our Day" and editor-in-chief of volume X in this series, a member of the editorial board of volumes 5 and 6 of "The History of the Second World War", and the scientific editor of "A Short History of the USSR". A. M. Samsonov is the editor-in-chief of the journal ISTORICHESKIYE ZAPISKI. 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Elected as member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "General History" was Sergey Leonidovich Tikhvinskiy, rector of the Diplomatic Academy of the USSR Ministr,y of Foreign Affairs, editor-in-chief of the journal NOVAYA I NOVEYSHAYA ISTORIYA (city of Moscow), born in 1918, Russian, member of the CPSU, corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences, doctor of historical sci~ncea, professor, specialist in modern and recent history of China and Japan, historio- graphy, the study of the sources an~ history of international relations in the Far East, author of over 300 publications, including the monographs: "The Movement for Reforms in China at the End of the 19th Century and Kang Youwei", "Sun Yat-sen. Foreign Policy Views and Practice. (From the History of the National Liberation Struggle of the Chinese People 1885-1925)", "The History of China and the Present", and others. His works have been published in several foreign languages. He took active part in the preparation of the multi-volume works "World History" and "The History of Diplomacy", "The History of the Foreign Policy of the USSR", and others, he is the initiator of the elaboration of the problein of the formation of the Chinese nation, the ideology of Chinese nationalism, and is the investigator of other important problems of the history of China. He has distinguished himself in the criticism of anti-Marxist, Maoist conceptions of the historical development of China. S. L. Tikhvinskiy has made a great contribution to the study of Russo- Japanese and Soviet-Japanese relations, the foreign policy of the USSR, and the national liberation movement in the developing countries. He was the director and a participant of the author collectives of the collective voluines of articles "China. Japan. History and Philology", "China and Her Neighbors in Ancient and _ Medieval Times", "The Manchu Uynasty in China", "The Xin Hai Revolution in China", "The Tatar-Mongols in Asia and Europe","Sun Yat-sen. 1866-1966. In Com- memoration of the 100th Anniversary of His Birth", and the collective monograph "The Modern History of China". A number of collections of documents on the foreign - policy of the USSR were published with his participation, including "The USSR at International Conferences of the Period of the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945", as well as about the relations of the USSR with other socialist countries, on Soviet- German, Soviet-French, and Soviet-Mexican relations, the fundamental publication "kussia and the USA: Establishmen.t of Relations. 1765-1815", the director of the publication of which he was on the Soviet side, the publication of documents on Russian-Chinese Relations in the 17th-18th Centuries, and publications on the foreign policy of Russia. S. L. Tikhvinskiy devotes a great deal of attention to the training of scientific cadres and is the deputy academician secretary of the Department of History of the USSR Academy of Sciences, the chairman of the National Committee of Historians of the Soviet Union, a member of the Bureau of the Interna- , tional Committee of Historical Sciences, the first deputy chairman of the Central Piana~e~xen~ Board of the Society for Soviet-Chinese Friendship, and the vice- president of the "USSR-Japan Society". Elected as corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "History of the USSR" was Valeriy Pavlovich Alekseyev, senior scientific associate of the Institute of Ethnography imeni N. N. Miklukho-Maklay of the USSR Academy of Sciences (city of Moscow), born in 1929, Russian, non-party member, doctor of _ historical sciences, specialist in historical anthropology, author of more than 300 publications, including "The Origin of the Peoples of Eastern Europe. (Cranio- _ logical Research)", "The Origin of the Peoples of the Caucasus. Craniological Re- search", "Paleoanthrnpology of the Terrestrial Globe and the Formation of Human 21 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY Races. Paleolith", "Osteometry. Method of Anthropological Research", "The Geo- graphy of Human Races", "Historical Anthropology", and others. The majority of his works are devoted to the elaboration, on the basis of anthropological material, of the problems of ethnogenesis, the relationship of contemporary and ancient peoples, the interrelationship of social and biological factors in the history of mankind, anthropogenesis, the demography of the ancient population, and the level of the productive forces in primitive soeiety and its periodization. The works of V. P. Alekseyev have been translated into foreign languages. He is ~i member of the permanent Organizational Committee of the International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnographical Sciences. Elected as corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "General History" was Grigoriy Maksimovich Bongard-Lev~in, sector head of the Insti- tute for Oriental Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences (city of Moscow), born in 1933, Jew, member of the CPSU, doctor of historical sciences, specialist in the history and culture of Central and South Asia, author of more than 100 publications, including the monographs "India of the Epoch of the Maurya", "Ancient Indian Civili- zation. Philosophy, Science and Religion", "The Art of Sri Lanka. The Classical Period","Research on Ancient India and Central Asia", and others. His works are devoted to the problems of the history, culture and ethnogenesis of the peoples of India, the socio-economic structure of ancient Indian society, and the history of Buddhism and Central Asian mont~ments of Indian culture. For his Indological re- search he was awarded the J. Nehru Prize and the Gold Medal of the Asiatic Society of Bengali. He is vice-president of the International Association for Sanskritolo- gy, honorary member of the Indian Archeological Society, and a number of his works have been published abroad. G. M. Bongard-Levin is a member of the editorial board of the journal VESTNIK DREVNEY ISTORII, deputy chairman of the editorial board of the series Written Monuments of the Peoples of the East", and a member of the Executive Committee of the Society for Soviet-Indian Friendship. Elected as corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "History of the USSR" was Yelena Yioasafovna Druzhinina, senior scientific associate of the Institute of History of the USSR of the USSR Academy of Sciences (city of Moscow), born in 1916, Russian, member of the CPSU, doctor of historical sciences, specialist in patriotic history of the 18th and 19th centuries and the history of Russo-German cultural relations, author of more than 100 printed works, including the monographs: "The Peace of Kuchuk-Kainardzhi in 1774 (Its Preparation and Con- clusion)", "The Northern Black Sea Littoral during 1775-1800", and "The Southern Ukraine in the Period of the Crisis of Feudalism, 1825-1860". These works show the progressive consequences of Russia's exit to the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, and the role of the popular masses in the settlement and economic assimila- tion of this region. A large place in her research is occupied by the elucidation of the social division of labor between the "outlying districts" and the internal gubernii [provinces] of Russia and by the refutation of the conceptions of bour- geois authors who attempt to distort the character of Russia's influence on the Ukraine. E. I. Druzhinina took part in the preparation of a number of collective works, including "Essays on the History of the USSR". She is a member of the International Commission on Slavic Research and the Commission of Historians of the USSR and the GDR, and works in the All-Russian Society for the Preservation of Monuments of History and Culture. 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-8 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY Elected as corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialty of "History of the USSR" was Baydabek Akhcaedovich Tulepbayev, vice-president of the Academy of Sciences of the Kazakh SSR (city of Alma-Ata), born in 1921, Kazakh, mem- ber of the CPSU, doctor of historical sciences, professor, Academician of the Acade- my of Sciences of the Kazakh SSR, specialist in the history of agrarian transforma- tions in Central Asia and Kazakhstan, author of more than 70 publications, including the monographs: "The Triumph of Leninist Ideas of the Socialist Transformation of Agriculture in Central Asia and Kazakhstan", "Agrarian Transformations in the Repub- lics of the Soviet East", "The Realization of the Leninist Agrarian Policy of the Party in the Republics of Central Asia", and "The Communist Party of Uzbekistan in the Struggle for a Steep Upsurge in Agriculture (1953-1958)". B. A. Tulepbayev is a deputy of the Kazakh SSR Supreme Soviet, a member of the Auditing Commission of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan, a member of the Alma-Ata Obkom of the Couununist Party of Kazakhstan, and chairman of the management board of the republic society "Znaniye" [Knowledge]. One vacancy for a member of the USSR Academy of Sciences and two vacancies for cor- responding members of the USSR Academy of Sciences remained unfilled since none of the candidates for them being voted on received the necessary majority of votes. Elected as corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences in the specialt;� of "Ethnography" was Kirill Vasil'yevich Chistov, editor-in-chief of the journal "Soviet Ethnography", sector head of the Institute of Ethnograph~~ imeni N. N. Miklukho-Maklay of the USSR Academy of Sciences (city of Leningrad), born in 1919, Russian, member of the CPSU, doctor of historical sciences, professor, specialist in Slavic ethnography and the study of folklore, author of more than 200 publica- tions, including the monographs: "Russian Popular Socio-Utopian Legends of the 17th-19th Centuries" and "National Poetess I. A. Fedosova. Essay on the Life and Creative Work". The research of K. V. Chistov is devoted to the methodology of the study of the historical process, the theory of spiritual culture, the dev~lopment of ethnography and the study of folklore, socio-psychology and socio-linguistics. A number of his works have been translated into foreign languages.. A member of the authors' collective of the work "Contemporaxy Ethnic Processes in the USSR", he was awarded the State Prize of the USSR in 1981, he is vice-president of the International Society of Researchers of Folklore in Europe, an ho?iorary member of the Pol~sh Ethnographic Sociery, the Finnish Literary Society, and conducts peda- gogical work at Leningrad University. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Pravda", "Voprosy istorii", 1982 8970 CSO: 1800/442 23 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ON~.Y NATIONAL aI.L-UNION CONFERENCE OF JURISTS REPORTED _ Moscow SOVETSKOYE GOSUDARSTVO I PRAVO in Russian No 4, April 1982 pp 131-139 [Conference Report: "The Tasks of Developing Juridical Science"] [Excerpt] In October 1981 the All-Union Scientific Coordination Conference of Jurists, "The 26th CPSU Congress and the Tasks of the Development of Juridical Science," was held in Moscow. The conference which was organized by the Scien- tif ic Council "The Laws of the Development of the State, the Administration, and the Law" of the USSR Acadetuy of Sciences and the USSR Ministry of Higher and Secondary Specialized Education was the most impressive forum of legal special- ists in recent years. More than 1200 legal scholars and practical workers took part in its work. Seven reports were heard at the plenary session. In opening the conference, the USSR Minister of Justice V. I. Terebilov emphasized that in accordance with the decisions of the 26th CPSU Congress, juridical science was faced with responsi~ble tasks. Soviet legal science had attained definite results in solving the theoretical problems of the state and the law, and in introducing scientific achievements into practice. V. I. Terebilov took note of the necessity for studying the problems of improving the management of the economy, improving state management, and strengthening the public principles in the work. of the state apparatus, and he emphas3~zed the ideological importance of juri- dical science. In his report, "The Theoretical Problems of Juridical Science in the Light of the Decisions of the 26th CPSU Congress," the director of the Institute of Government and Law of the USSR Academy of Sciences and Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences V. N. Kudryavtsev considered the tasks of Soviet - juridical science which he connected with the functions that are performed by Soviet jurisprudence. Soviet j.uridical science performs not only descriptive functions which come down to commentaries upon ~uridical material, but also cognitive, exnlanatory, and ideological functions. One of the tas~cs of jurists is to know the ob~ective laws of the development and functioning of the Soviet state and law. In this connection, the reporter also emphasized the importance of a deeper revelation of the mechanism of law application activity, and of a study of the ways of increasing the effectiveness of the legal regulation of social relations. 24 , , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The forecasting and planning of the development of the state-legal superstructure in our country for the 1990's and the years after the year 2000 is an important task. Considering the explanatory function of jurisprudence, the reporter spoke about the practical importance of work by legal scholars which should con- tain concrete recommendations on the preparation of new legislative acts. The ideological function of Soviet ~urisprudence which plays an active role in defending the communist worldview and in propagandizing the advanced and humane ideas of contemporary legal science is acquiring especial importance under present- day conditions. In his report, "The Tasks of the Juridical Vuzes in the Organization of Scientific Research in the Light of the Decisions of the 26th CPSU Congress," Yu. M. Kozlov took note of the importance and significance of the scientific research which is conducted in the vuzes for the accomplishment of the tasks of communist construction. In order for vuz science to be able to accomplish its tasks more successfully it is necessary to eliminate such shortcomings as the lack of a single state plan for the development of vuz juridical science and for the scientific research specialization of. the country's vuzes. The reporter threw light upon the problem of the coordination of scientific re;~earch work in the juridical vu2es and scientific research institutes, and also the institutions of juridical practice. The General Procurator of the USSR A. M. Rekunknv devoted his report to the tasks of strengthening socialist legality and increasing the effectiveness of the struggle against law violations in the light of the 26th CPS'U Congress. He noted that an improvement of the legislation, an improvement of the work of the law protection agencies, and greater activeness by the public and an increased role - for it in protecting law and order create the necessary conditions for realizing the party's instructions on eradicating all kinds of violations of law and order, liquidating crime, and eliminating the causes which give rise to it. After having shown the general tendency toward a decrease in crime in our country, the reporter considered the problems of the eradication of crime and, _ especially, of its prevention. Legal propaganda is not only one of the measures to prevent violations of legality and law and order; it also has to be directed at strengthening discipline, organization, and legality. In a report on the legal problems of improving the direction of the Pconomy, the _ corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences V. V. Laptev spoke about the fact that this necessitated the creation of uniform legal principles for the organization and work of the territorial production complexes and industrial centers, and the working out of the juridical means which will ensure the development of cost accounting in all of the elements of the economy. With the agroindustrial complex a uniform approach is needed to defining the way in which asso- ciations in industry and agriculture are subject to law. An i~provement o~ planning requires an improvement of the legislation on planning, the creation of legal guarantees of the quality of planning, and the securing of the rights of enterprises and associations in planning work. It is also important to im- prove law application work in the economy, to perfect the work of state arbi- ~ tration and legal work in the economy, and to expand the training of scientific cadres in economic law. - 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In his report, "The 26th CPSU Congress and the Tasks of Improving Soviet Legis- lation," K. F. Gutsenko emphasized that juridical scholars have done a large amount of work in this direction. The Principles and other acts of all-union legislation and the republic codes have been adopted, and much has been done in ~he field of systematizing the union and republic legislation. But "the work to improve legislation," L. I. Brezhnev noted in the Summary Report of the CC CPSU to the 26th Party Congress, "will continue." The following directions should be the top priority ones here: the leadership of the economy, the mechanism for realizing the constitutional rights of citizens and public argani- zations, and the completion of the all-union Code of Laws. The actual outcome of - the work to create a USSR Code of Laws has for now been expressed only in the publication of its first volume. In connection with the legislative work, not only practical agencies, but also scientific collectives are being faced with large tasks. What has to be involved here is both the theoretical scientific substantiation of the various legislative decisions and a direct participation in the preparation of draft laws, the development of concrete norms and formu- lations, and so forth. In his report, "The Problems of the Integration and Coordination of Juridical Science and Its Connection with Practice," the Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences G. A. Aksenenok noted that the 26th CPSU Congress had sinyled out as being among the key scientific organizational problems the integration and coordination of scientists upon which the success of the development of all of Soviet science and, in particular, of juridical science depends to a substan- tial extent. It is necessary to concentrate the attention of juridical scholars on studying important overall problems. The reporter also believes that the coordination of science should be concentrated in the scientific coordination council of the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Sciences which should work on these problems on the basis of uniform scientific organizational principles. He made a number of proposals on improving the whole of coordination work in the country and on the reorganization of the system of coordination agencies in the system of the academies of sciences of the union republics by means of the for- mation in the Academies of Sciences of the Kazakh SSR, the Belorussian SSR, the Georgian SSR, and the Uzbek SSR of independent institutes of state and law, and in all of the remaining republics by means of the transformation of the existing scientific legal subdivisions into departments made directly subordinate to the presidiums of the academies of sciences of the union republics. This kind of organization would promote a further development of research and the performance of the tasks which follo~ from the decisions of the 26th CPSU Congress, the USSR Constitution, and the Constitutions of the union and autonomous republics. The conference had 10 sections working at it. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo "Nauka", "Sovetskoye gosudarstvo i pravo", 1982 2959 CSO: 1800/470 26 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070001-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NATIONAL BOOK ON SOVIET RITUALS REVIEWED Moscow VOPROSY FILOSOFII in Russian No 3, Mar 82 p 162 [Review by V. A. Zots of book "Sovetskaya Obryadnost' i Dukhovnaya Kul'tura" [Soviet Rites and Spiritual Culture] by N. M. Zakovich, "Naukova Dumka," Kiev, 1980, 225 pp] [Text] The author regards ritual in general as a form of the accumulation and retentlon of social experience and as a mechanism for its transmission to new generations. The establishment and development of Soviet ritual is characterized in the book as one of the aspects of the cultural revolution in the USSR. This to a large extent has defined the social and educational functions of ritual. As a component element of socialist culture, a new ritual, as is ~hown in the book, is closely connected with the spiritual values of our society and actively influences the formation of a worldview. The author investigates the dependence of r.~`uals upon the type of social re- , lations and the way of life of people. The analysis in the work of the social-psyc~?ological functions of rituals is an important one. Rituals are regarded by the author as one of the forms of social intercourse which manifests itself on various levels. Along with this, light is thrown ugon the needs which determine the ritual form of social intercourse, and the social--psychological and educational functions of rituals intheir unity are analyzed. It is ritual, in the opinion of the suthor, that establishes and con- solidates the social status of the individual, offers a person a standard of values during periods of important life changes, and helps him to avoid a feeling ' of uncertainty about his future and to base himself on already existing social experience. Whereas at the dawn of their establishment Soviet rituals were formed as one of the means of struggle against religious survivals, the further progress of Soviet society and the departure by the masses from religion advanced the posi- tive function of socialist rituals to the forefront. Along with a rejection of religion, Soviet holidays and rituals help to affirm the humanist ideals of the new society and are an expregsion of the socialist way of life. The theoretical aspect of the study of the problem is clnsely connected in the book with practical tasks. A great deal of attention is devoted in it to the 27 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8 ~OR OFFICIAL USE ONLY problems of increasing the effectiveness.of the system of the atheistic education of the workers, and to improving the or~anizational and artistic expressive agpects of socialist holidays and rituals. The~problems of the formation and development of new rituals, as is emphasized by the author, requires the overall efforts of philosophers, sociologists, teachers, psychologists, and aestheticians. COPYRIGHT: Izdatel'stvo TsK ~PSS "Pravda", "Voprosy filosofii", 1982 2959 CSO: 1800/468 END 28 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070001-8