STRATEGIC CHOICE AND PATH-DEPENDENCY IN POST-SOCIALISM

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STRATEGIC CHOICE AND PATH-DEPENDENCY IN POST-SOCIALISM

Institutional Dynamics in the Transformation Process

9781858980454 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Jerzy Hausner, Professor and Head of the Department of Public Economy and Administration, Cracow Academy of Economics, Poland, Bob Jessop, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Lancaster University and Klaus Nielsen, Professor of Institutional Economics, Birkbeck University of London, UK
Publication Date: March 1995 ISBN: 978 1 85898 045 4 Extent: 352 pp
Strategic Choice and Path-Dependency in Post-Socialism focuses on the distinctive institutional legacies of state socialism and their impact on the transformation of Poland, Hungary and the former Czechoslovakia. Strategic dilemmas and problems of institutional design involved in the transition from state socialism to democratic and market-orientated societies are also addressed in this ground breaking volume.

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Strategic Choice and Path-Dependency in Post-Socialism focuses on the distinctive institutional legacies of state socialism and their impact on the transformation of Poland, Hungary and the former Czechoslovakia. Strategic dilemmas and problems of institutional design involved in the transition from state socialism to democratic and market-orientated societies are also addressed in this ground breaking volume.

A distinguished group of scholars from Eastern and Central Europe, as well as the West, addresses the transformation process from the institutional and evolutionary perspectives in political economy and the social sciences. The first part presents six essays by Western scholars reflecting on institutional design, strategic dilemmas, path-dependency, and the dynamics of post-socialism with a general relevance to the transformation process. The remaining papers provide detailed, contemporary analyses of the transformation of Poland, Hungary, and the former Czechoslovakia respectively. Each part covers the same broad set of themes so that the reader obtains an insightful and authoritative overview of the problems of institutional design, strategic dilemmas and path dependency.

This strong combination of theoretically informed comparative analysis with up-to-date case studies, drawing on several years’ experience of the countries discussed, will ensure that this major new volume will be welcomed by students and researchers interested in Eastern and Central Europe, comparative economics, politics and sociology.
Critical Acclaim
‘. . . is a stimulating and provocative book. . .’
– Martin Myant, The Economic Journal

‘. . . it results in a useful collection which begins to lay the basis for a better understanding of interest group dynamics in post-communist economies.’
– George Blazyca, Europe-Asia Studies
Contributors
Contributors: J. Adam, L. Bruszt, J.L. Campbell, J. Gorniak, J. Habuda, J. Hausner, J. Jerschina, B. Jessop, T. Kowalik, P. Mertlik, K. Nielsen, C. Offe, S. Owsiak, L. Rychetnik, D. Stark, H. van Zon, E. Voszka
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