The enthralling, forgotten story of how the world’s first social
democracy took shape in the wake of the Russian Revolution. Following
the collapse of the Russian Empire, the small nation of Georgia
established its independence in May 1918. Its leaders surprised the
world by creating the first social democratic state. Based on a
combination of parliamentarianism and direct democracy, it was a
representative government of the peasants and workers themselves, with
ballots in their hands. The First Social Democracy is the definitive
history of a government that should inspire social democrats today.
Stephen F. Jones chronicles how the founders of the new state
navigated myriad challenges, including territorial threats from
abroad, internal ethnic conflicts, and geopolitical rivalries between
the imperial Ottomans, the British, and Germans. In the midst of these
existential challenges, Georgia’s social democrats set about writing
a constitution to put the country on a distinctive path of genuine
self-government—protecting democratic rights, promoting political
pluralism, and championing equality. Jones brings to life the
passionate debates that shaped Georgia’s democracy during a moment
of acute global instability. The Democratic Republic of Georgia was
strangled in its crib. Just four days after the constitution was
ratified, its capital fell to the Red Army. Under Soviet rule, the
republic was lost to history. Soviet scholars were forbidden to
research this Georgian story, and Western scholars had little interest
in a small and peripheral state that was independent for only three
years. Recovering a forgotten experiment in democratic citizenship and
statecraft, Jones reminds us of those audacious times when Georgians
created and defended political freedom against the rise of Soviet
communism.
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The Democratic Republic of Georgia, 1918–1921
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674304109
Publisert
2026
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter