Abstract

The article examines the views of one of the prominent figures of the Russian political emigration of the 1920s V. I. Gurko on the possible transformation of the state and social structure of Russia after the liquidation of the Bolshevik regime. As a politician, V. I. Gurko believed in the need to establish a dictatorship for a transitional period, but at the same time idealistically perceived the readiness of part of the population to transform the political regime and state power in the USSR.

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