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Post-Crisis Adaptation in Communist Regimes

Europe (Central and Eastern)
China
Comparative Politics
Contentious Politics
Elites
Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Power
Michael Bernhard
University of Florida
Michael Bernhard
University of Florida
Martin Dimitrov
Tulane University
Petra Guasti
Charles University

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Abstract

This article introduces the concept of post-crisis adaptation to explain the long-term resilience of communist regimes. It argues that crises have served as catalysts for institutional and ideological renewal. Through a comparative historical analysis of Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, and China, the study traces how elites responded to crises of rule by reconfiguring the balance between repression, co-optation, and legitimation. The analysis demonstrates that successful adaptation requires both innovation and continuity: regimes must change enough to survive, but not enough to undermine their core structure of domination. By capturing this dynamic, the concept of post-crisis adaptation adds a temporal and agentic dimension to existing models of authoritarian stability, such as Gerschewski’s three pillars of resilience. It also bridges the literatures on comparative authoritarianism and historical institutionalism by conceptualizing crises as critical junctures that generate incremental yet consequential change. The findings show that the survival of communist regimes has depended on their capacity to learn from crises and adapt.