First the transition, then the crash : Eastern Europe in the 2000s

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First the transition, then the crash : Eastern Europe in the 2000s

edited by Gareth Dale

Pluto, 2011

  • : pbk

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The 1989-91 upheavals in Eastern Europe sparked a turbulent process of social and economic transition. Two decades on, with the global economic crisis of 2008-10, a new phase has begun. This book explores the scale and trajectory of the crisis through case studies of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Russia, Ukraine and the former Yugoslavia. The contributors focus upon the relationships between geopolitics, the world economy and class restructuring. The book covers the changing relationship between business and states; foreign capital flows; financialisation and asset price bubbles; austerity and privatisation; and societal responses, in the form of reactionary populism and progressive social movements. Challenging neoliberal interpretations that envisage the transition as a process of unfolding liberty, the dialectic charted in these pages reveals uneven development, attenuated freedoms and social polarisation.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: The Transition in Central and Eastern Europe by Gareth Dale 2. Marx on 1989 by G. M. Tamas Part One Russia: class and power in the age of Putin 3. Workers in Modern Russia by Mike Haynes 4. Russia's Foreign Policy from Putin to Medvedev by Gonzalo Pozo 5. Autocratic Neoliberalism and Beyond: Russia's Caesarist Journey into the Global Political Economy by Owen Worth Part Two From the Baltic to the Balkans: market reform and economic crisis 6. Twenty Years Lost: Latvia's Failed Development in the Post-Soviet World by Jeff Sommers and Ja-nis Berzins 7. The Ukrainian Economy and the International Financial Crisis by Marko Bojcun 8. Poland and the Global Political Economy: From Neoliberalism to Populism (and Back Again) by Stuart Shields 9. The Czech Republic: Neoliberal Reform and Economic Crisis by Ilona Svihlikova 10. From Poster Boy of Neoliberal Transformation to Basket Case: Hungary and the Global Economic Crisis by Adam Fabry 11. Serbia from the October 2000 Revolution to the Crash by Martin Upchurch and Darko Marinkovic 12. Conclusion: The 'Crash' in Central and Eastern Europe by Gareth Dale and Jane Hardy Notes on Contributors Index

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