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The new edition of this market-leading text brings together
specially commissioned chapters by a team of top international
scholars on the changing politics of this diverse region
negotiating the competing pulls of the European Union and
post-communist Russia.
The papers that comprise this collection examine the role of
competing European, national, ethnic and regional identities over
the introduction of new regional levels of government in the former
Soviet and now Central and Eastern European states.
The new edition of this market-leading text brings together
specially commissioned chapters by a team of top international
scholars on the changing politics of this diverse region
negotiating the competing pulls of the European Union and
post-communist Russia.
Post-communist state transformations in Central and Eastern Europe
have been accompanied by an upsurge of identity politics as
newly-independent peoples sought to redefine themselves and their
place in Europe.
National unity has proved elusive in practice as new democracies
have debated constitutional and territorial-administrative changes
to prepare for the challenges of "returning to Europe" while at the
same time integrating diverse historical regions and ethnic
minorities.
The case of regional reform and resurgent regional politics
presented in this volume highlight the divergent concepts of
statehood which have emerged as Central and East Europeans struggle
to come to terms with the meaning of their statehood today.
Competing models have been advocated in terms of their perceived
conformity with national or local traditions and wider trends in
modern European governance, but local interests and identities have
challenged this emphasis on the imperatives of sovereignty,
territorial unityand administrative efficiency.
The contributors investigate these pressing issues as new and
tougher controls are enforced at the EU's emerging external
borders, posing fresh challenges to national, regional and minority
identities.
Reconstituting the Market details many transition economies - some
already well known, others enjoying very little attention from
researchers - and a range of important issues to do with state
building and its links with microeconomic transformation. The book
was based on the authors' view that transition in the new states
would be fundamentally more difficult than in more established
states - a view which turned out to be incorrect, since in all the
transition countries the former communist state had to be largely
rebuilt as part of the complex process of constructing a market
economy. Aspects of this process, focusing on competition policy,
privatization, and the regulation of public utilities, are examined
in respect to Central Europe, the Baltics, Russia, Ukraine and
Moldova. The result is essential reading for anyone seeking an
up-to-date account of key transition issues, covering both familiar
and unfamiliar countries.
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