The Role of Public Confessions in Show Trials: An Analysis of the Moscow Show Trials

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Abstract

Authority figures may organize show trials featuring public confessions when they are faced with deep rooted contradictions within the social order and want to increase their legitimacy, delegitimize defendants, and justify increased social control in society. An analysis of the court report of the Moscow Show Trials found that these public confessions frame conflicts rooted in contradictions within the social order as acts of deviance that can be resolved with additional social control. The public confessions accomplished this using four main themes: establishing credibility, labeling the defendants as deviant, endorsing the power holder, and demonstrating closure.

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APA

Decker, S. K. (2019). The Role of Public Confessions in Show Trials: An Analysis of the Moscow Show Trials. Journal of Historical Sociology, 32(4), 459–477. https://doi.org/10.1111/johs.12255

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