Exceptionalism and its limits: The legacy of self- management in the former Yugoslavia (CROSBI ID 57940)
Prilog u knjizi | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Grdešić, Marko
engleski
Exceptionalism and its limits: The legacy of self- management in the former Yugoslavia
A sizable literature has investigated the impact of communist legacies in Eastern Europe, whether in general (Jowitt 1992 ; Millar and Wolchik 1994 ; Ekiert and Hanson 2003 ; Pop- Eleches 2007) or in the context of labor politics (Crowley and Ost 2001 ; Crowley 2004 ; Kubicek 2004 ; Chen and Sil 2006). Crowley and Ost have put forward the thesis that labor has emerged as a weak political and socioeconomic actor in much of the region and have adopted the legacy of the communist regime as their central explanation. In reaction to this, a body of work emerged which has asked whether the Yugoslav system of socialist self- management, as distinct from Soviet state socialism, presents an exception (Stanojević 2003 ; Grdešić 2008 ; Meszmann 2008). A small controversy has developed in which the impact of the Yugoslav legacy is seen either as negative (Arandarenko 2001) or positive for labor (Stanojević 2003). This chapter will offer a re-assessment of the Yugoslav legacy and trace its workings throughout the post- communist period in three successor countries, Slovenia, Croatia and Serbi
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Podaci o prilogu
103-121.
objavljeno
Podaci o knjizi
Working through the past: Labor and authoritarian legacies in comparative perspective
Crowley, Stephen ; Caraway, Teri ; Cook, Maria
Ithaca (NY): Cornell University Press
2015.
978-0-8014-5351-9