After almost three decades of economic adjustment and
restructuring, what have been the political consequences of
structural reforms? "Democratic Institutions of Undemocratic
Individuals" is a cogent, intriguing and a long-overdue account of
the real impact of economic globalization in the developing world.
In this essential book, Blind bridges an important gap in the
literature attempting to straddle the yawning chasm between those
scholars who argue that privatizations are good for democracy and
those who maintain that they are not. This book demonstrates the
differential impact of privatizations on different sectors of
society. It gives a different perspective on the virtues and
shortcomings of labor unions in democratization processes, and
introduces fascinating comparisons between Kemalist and Peronist
templates of nation-building. It yields a judicious process-tracing
of Turkish and Argentine labor developments and depicts the
groundbreaking interlacing of privatization and democratization in
the global era.
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