New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. — 319 p. — ISBN10: 1349282529; ISBN13: 978-1349282524.
Bringing together leading authorities and cutting edge scholars, this collection re-examines the defining concepts of Stalinism and the Stalinization model. The aim of the book is to explore how the common imperatives of a centralized movement were experienced across national boundaries.
Introduction: Stalinization and Communist Historiography
The Stalinization of the KPD: Old and New Views
Stalinization: Balance Sheet of a Complex Notion
The Central Bodies of the Comintern: Stalinization and Changing Social Composition
The Impact of "Bolshevization" and "Stalinization" on French and German Communism: A Comparative View
Paul Levi and the Turning Point of 1921: Bolshevik Emissaries and International Discipline in the Time of Lenin
'Kings among their subjects'? Ernst Thalmann, Harry Pollitt and the Leadership Cult as Stalinization
Stalinization and the Communist Party of Italy
The Spanish Civil War and the Routes of Stalinization
Finnish Communism, Bolshevization and Stalinization
To Make the Nation or to Break It: Communist Dilemmas in Two Interwar Multinational States
Testing the Limits: Stalinization and the New Zealand and British Communist Parties
From Bolshevism to Stalinism: Communism and the Comintern in Ireland
'Their unCommunist Stand': Chicago's Foreign Language-Speaking Communists and the Question of Stalinization, 1928-1935
The Profintern and the "Syndicalist Current' in the United States