Capitalist Diversity on Europe's Periphery
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Dorothee Bohle
and Bela Greskovits
About this book
Dorothee Bohle and Bela Geskovits trace the fundamental decisions made by postsocialist countries that have joined the European Union since 2004 or are candidates to do so.
Author / Editor information
Dorothee Bohle is Associate Professor of Political Science at Central European University and the author of Europe's New Periphery: Poland's Transformation and Transnational Integration. Béla Greskovits is Professor of International Relations and European Studies at Central European University and the author of The Political Economy of Protest and Patience: East European and Latin American Transformations Compared.
Reviews
This is a long awaited book on the emerging capitalist systems in Central and Eastern Europe. Dorothee Bohle and Béla Greskovits set themselves a very challenging task: to comprehensively cover the capitalist diversity in 11 countries at a time when comparative research in the area is still at an emergent stage, and when detailed research on the individual countries is still in its infancy. They have achieved this masterfully.... Capitalist Diversity on Europe's Periphery is a superb book that should be on every reading list on Eastern European capitalism. It will certainly become a reference book on the subject as well as an agenda setter for future research in the area and beyond.
Dora Gyorffy, Peter Pazmany Catholic University:
The authors express a passionate commitment to liberal democracy, especially to its neocorporatist version. At the same time given their extensive knowledge of actual events they manage to stay away from far-reaching generalisations and paint a highly complex picture of the transition. While the diversity of crisis experiences raises a number of challenges to their theoretical framework, the overview of struggles during the past 20 years to combine market ef?ciency and popular support provides an important set of hypotheses regarding the future. The combination of deep theoretical and regional insights is likely to make the book a reference volume not only for scholars focusing on the region but also for those pondering the future of global capitalism and democracy.
Hilary Appel:
Dorothee Bohle and Béla Greskovits examine the varying forms that capitalism has taken in east central Eurpoe, offering a new typology of capitalist democracies informed importantly by the work of Karl Polanyi's early analysis of twentieth-century capitalist development in Europe.... The nuance and clarity of the analysis allow the book to engage multiple debates on postcommunist political and economic reform.
Robert Legvold:
Bohle and Greskovits see three distinct approaches: the 'neoliberalism' that characterizes the Baltic states and favors market efficiency over the other two concerns; the "embedded liberalism" of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia, which softens the pursuit of market efficiency and pays greater attention to welfare policies; and Slovenia's 'neocorporatist' approach, which seeks to cushion the effects of marketization on particular segments of society. In this tightly argued comparative study, the authors also explore how these three clusters of countries have dealt with their socialist legacies and with the imperatives imposed by a liberal global economy and the financial and economic crisis that it has lately generated.
Martin Myant:
Bohle and Greskovits have produced a generally solid comparative study of developments in former state socialist.... They have developed a comprehensive framework for explaining the divergences.... A much better starting point for comparative analysis of the development of types of capitalism in the region they study than any other currently available.
Martin Myant:
Bohle and Greskovits... have given us a much better starting point for comparative analysis of the development of types of capitalism in the region they study than any other currently available.
Stefan Sfallfors:
Capitalist Diversity on Europe's Periphery focuses on post-1990 East-Central Europe.... The result is an absolutely masterful analysis, sharply argued and beautifully written. I believe it is set to become a classic in the field of transition studies.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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Figures and Tables
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xi -
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Abbreviations
xiii -
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Introduction: The Success, Fragility, and Diversity of Postsocialist Capitalism
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1. Capitalist Diversity after Socialism
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2. Paths to Postsocialist Capitalism
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3. Nation Builders and Neoliberals: The Baltic States
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4. Manufacturing Miracles and Welfare State Problems: The Visegrád Group
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5. Neocorporatism and Weak States: The Southeastern European Countries
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6. The Return of Hard Times
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Conclusion: Postsocialist Capitalism Twenty Years On
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Index
275