AHC: Alexander I -> Earlier Reform in Russia

With no PoDs prior to his father’s assassination (or, if possible, the Treaty of Tilst), how much more can liberalization of the Russian Empire advance under Alexander I than OTL, and how much earlier can key reforms come in general? What I’m particularly interested in here is serfdom (its reform, weakening, and/or abolition), followed by a shift toward constitutional government (whether by establishing layers of Obshchina, Zemstovs, and Duma, or something else).

We can assume this is part of a TL where Napoleon doesn’t invade Russia, and a Bonapartist Europe emerges, unless any of you think that’s less than ideal for the challenge. @TRH @33N @Seraphiel
 
If Alexander touches serfdom so early he would have close meeting with dagger's blade.
If he so much as touches on serfdom? Considering that he took at least some measures OTL (like banning serfdom from the Baltics during the 1810's) and had some (albeit wildly inconsistent) interest in doing more, I have my doubts about that. I have trouble believing that if he had more political capital than OTL (if, for example, there had been no French Invasion) that he wouldn't have done more to rollback the institution, or that doing so would invariably provoke a functional coup.
 
With no PoDs prior to his father’s assassination (or, if possible, the Treaty of Tilst), how much more can liberalization of the Russian Empire advance under Alexander I than OTL, and how much earlier can key reforms come in general? What I’m particularly interested in here is serfdom (its reform, weakening, and/or abolition), followed by a shift toward constitutional government (whether by establishing layers of Obshchina, Zemstovs, and Duma, or something else).

We can assume this is part of a TL where Napoleon doesn’t invade Russia, and a Bonapartist Europe emerges, unless any of you think that’s less than ideal for the challenge. @TRH @33N @Seraphiel

He could, especially after 1812, to simplify the process of letting the serfs free on owner's initiative (without the land), introduce some regulations stimulating "obrok" (serf is free to go off the land and get hired/build up his own business with an obligation to pay certain amounts of money to the owner) vs. "barschina" (working for owner certain number of days), etc. Complete emancipation would be a risky move.

As for the constitutional government, he could try something based upon the existing structures: nobility was electing its leaders on "uezd" and "gubernia" level this could be extended to having (exclusively noble, at least for starters) elected organ on governmental level with, at least for the starters, purely advisory powers (but when nobility was "expressing opinion" Tsar was usually listening) . Could be the same gubernia leaders. If works, the same principle could be applied to the merchant class starting with some kind of the town-level elective administration with the limited responsibilities (as later happened in OTL) which would be co-existing with the appointed administration.
 
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