Watching the Watchers: Communist Elites, the Secret Police and Social Order in Cold War Europe | a book discussion

Event description

  • Academic events
  • Free
  • Open to the public

>> Please note the new start time of 5:30 PM <<

Join us as the author and colleagues discuss his book and answer your questions. 

"Throughout history, dictators have constructed secret police agencies to neutralize rivals and enforce social order. But the same agencies can become disloyal and threatening. This book explores how eight communist regimes in Cold War Europe confronted this dilemma. 

Divergent strategies caused differences in regimes of repression, with consequences for social order and political stability. Surviving the shock of Josef Stalin's death, elites in East Germany and Romania retained control over the secret police. They grew their coercive institutions to effectively suppress dissent via surveillance and targeted repression. Elsewhere, ruling coalitions were thrown into turmoil after Stalin's death, changing personnel and losing control of the security apparatus. Post-Stalinist transitions led elites to restrict the capacity of the secret police and risk social disorder."
cambridge.org 

Author:

Henry Thomson, Associate Professor in ASU School of Politics and Global Studies.

Discussants:

Keith Brown, Professor, School of Politics and Global Studies, and Director, Melikian Center, whose research has focused primarily on politics, culture and identity in the Balkans, and has followed collaboration across scholarly and professional boundaries on civil and military forms of international intervention.

Neil Thomas, Fellow, Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis, where he studies elite politics, political economy, and foreign policy. He has also served a lecturer at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. 



Co-sponsored by the ASU Melikian Center: Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies with the
Phoenix Committee on Foreign Relations (PCFR).

Event contact

David Brokaw
480-965-4188
melikiancenter@asu.edu
Date

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Time

5:30 pm6:45 pm (MST)

Location

Durham Hall, Room 240

Cost

Free