Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs

Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs
Title Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs PDF eBook
Author Carole Nagengast
Publisher Routledge
Pages 239
Release 2019-06-04
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1000309606

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PREDOMINANTLY A RURAL NATION, Poland is most often depicted with urban scenes: steelworkers, trade unions, Communist party members, and Solidarity meetings. In contrast to this industrial vision, Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs views historical and recent changes and their agrarian consequences.During her many years in the Polish countryside, Dr. Nagengast has observed,studied, and worked side by side with farmers and other members of the agrarian class. Here she provides a first-hand perspective on the monumental failures of the Polish version of socialism, which were largely due to decisions that led the nation-state down a distinctly capitalist path to agrarian development. On the basis of her extensive research, Nagengast makes chilling forecasts about the impact of the accelerating development of capitalism on the culture, politics, and economy of Poland.This book will be useful to anthropologists, sociologists, and scholars interested in Eastern European and socialist studies.

Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs

Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs
Title Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs PDF eBook
Author Carole Nagengast
Publisher
Pages 239
Release 2019-09-13
Genre
ISBN 9780367285593

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PREDOMINANTLY A RURAL NATION, Poland is most often depicted with urban scenes: steelworkers, trade unions, Communist party members, and Solidarity meetings. In contrast to this industrial vision, Reluctant Socialists, Rural Entrepreneurs views historical and recent changes and their agrarian consequences.During her many years in the Polish countryside, Dr. Nagengast has observed, studied, and worked side by side with farmers and other members of the agrarian class. Here she provides a first-hand perspective on the monumental failures of the Polish version of socialism, which were largely due to decisions that led the nation-state down a distinctly capitalist path to agrarian development. On the basis of her extensive research, Nagengast makes chilling forecasts about the impact of the accelerating development of capitalism on the culture, politics, and economy of Poland.This book will be useful to anthropologists, sociologists, and scholars interested in Eastern European and socialist studies

Socialist Entrepreneurs

Socialist Entrepreneurs
Title Socialist Entrepreneurs PDF eBook
Author Iván Szelényi
Publisher
Pages 280
Release 1988
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN

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Studies the lives of people who combine wage labour for the government with part-time family agricultural production.

Bitter Harvest

Bitter Harvest
Title Bitter Harvest PDF eBook
Author Suava Zbierski-Salameh
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 305
Release 2013-04-11
Genre History
ISBN 0739165151

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Bitter Harvest, a historical ethnographic study, examines the property changes prompted by the early post-socialist neoliberal reforms designed to build capitalism in Poland. Historically, the book traces the halting but steady emergence of privatization and liberalization, even under socialism, and how these anticipated the reforms of the post-socialist period. Contrary to the view that the 1989 post-socialist policy represented a radical departure from former state socialist policies via the importation of Western “shock therapy” reforms, including the key economic institution of private property, this book dispenses with the sharp divide between the “socialist past” and “capitalist present” and argues the lasting importance of these historical antecedents in shaping both post-socialist policy and responses to it. Ethnographically, the book provides a detailed account of the different yet interdependent ways the post-socialist reform program influenced existing agricultural property forms—small farmers, production cooperatives, and state farms—leading in each case to unexpected economic results and political contestation of the policy objectives. This historical and ethnographic study of multiple forms of ownership poses a challenge to the common conception of a homogenized socialism based on state property. It also refutes the reductionist representation of the reality after socialism as the creation of Western-style, private property–based economic systems, unaffected by the unique Eastern European sociopolitical context. Instead, looking at Poland’s property changes through the eyes and experiences of diverse agricultural owners, this book employs the notion of conjoint property to unpack the complexity of ownership under socialism and theorize its evolution into an incomplete exclusive ownership after socialism. This new conceptual framework of property changes in early transition helps us to understand current developments in Eastern Europe as it integrates with the European Union and intersects with global capitalism. It further sheds light on the limits of the universality of the Western notion of private property.

Communities in Transformation

Communities in Transformation
Title Communities in Transformation PDF eBook
Author Gabriela Kiliánová
Publisher LIT Verlag Münster
Pages 216
Release 2004
Genre History
ISBN 9783825869779

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Since 1989, the theme of the onset, the course and future of the change in post- socialist countries of Central and Eastern Europe, was interlinked with the dismantling of the old authoritarian regime and introduction of the new democratic one. It has been at the centre of attention of politicians, media and the public at large, and it has entered the field of interest of the social sciences as well. For ethnologists and anthropologists this theme represents a unique historical experience and it creates the opportunity to observe the key processes of changes in specific conditions of the "living laboratory" of a current social reality. The collection of papers published in this issue has similar objectives. It brings empirical, mostly case studies, of cultural and socio-economic changes in rural and urban communities in Central and Eastern Europe, namely in the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia and Ukraine. Individual contributions explore the ongoing process of social, economic and cultural transformation in post-socialist societies and its impact at the local and regional micro-level.

Everyday Ruptures

Everyday Ruptures
Title Everyday Ruptures PDF eBook
Author Cati Coe
Publisher Vanderbilt University Press
Pages 241
Release 2011-04-15
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0826517498

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Ethnographies of children and youth who migrate and are affected by the migration of others

The Political Economy of State-Society Relations in Hungary and Poland

The Political Economy of State-Society Relations in Hungary and Poland
Title The Political Economy of State-Society Relations in Hungary and Poland PDF eBook
Author Anna Seleny
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 219
Release 2006-02-13
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 052183564X

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This book shows how Hungary and Poland led the transformations that brought down Communism.