Peter Struve
Peter Berngardovich Struve (1870–1944) was a Russian political economist, philosopher, and editor whose career spanned Marxism, liberal reformism, and staunch anti-Bolshevism.[1][2]
Born in Perm and educated at the University of St. Petersburg, Struve emerged as an early proponent of Marxism in imperial Russia, contributing to the drafting of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party's 1898 manifesto and editing Marxist periodicals such as Rabochee Delo and Novoe Slovo.[1] His "legal Marxism" emphasized empirical economic analysis and legal agitation over violent revolution, introducing Western scholarly methods to Russian socialist thought.[1] By the early 1900s, however, Struve critiqued orthodox Marxism's deterministic materialism, shifting toward constitutional liberalism; he edited the influential émigré journal Osvobozhdenie, advocating parliamentary democracy, individual rights, and market-oriented reforms.[2][1]
Struve joined the Constitutional Democratic Party (Kadets), serving as a deputy in the Second State Duma and promoting policies that balanced nationalism with civil liberties.[1] After the 1917 February Revolution, he initially supported the Provisional Government but vehemently opposed the Bolshevik October coup, aligning with White forces during the Civil War and warning of the catastrophic consequences of proletarian dictatorship.[2][1] Exiled to Paris in 1920, he continued scholarly work on Russian history and economics, defending private enterprise and critiquing Soviet central planning in publications like Khoziaistvo i tsena.[2] His intellectual evolution highlighted tensions between revolutionary ideology and pragmatic governance, influencing debates on Russia's path to modernity.[1]