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Book Titles No access
Legacies of the Collapse of Marxism
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 1994
Summary
A penetrating study by prominent authors of the aftermath of the collapse of Marxism. Rudolf Andorka discusses the causes of the collapse of the Communist system; Francis Kukuyama looks at the varieties of Russian nationalism; Craig Calhoun addresses the interaction of nationalism, civil society, and democracy; James M. Buchanan analyzes the implications for economies in transition of the asymmetrical reciprocity in market exchange; Robert Conquest discusses academe and the Soviet myth; and Seymour Martin Lipset concludes with the question of why we did not anticipate the failure of Communism.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 1994
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-913969-72-4
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4617-2368-4
- Publisher
- University Press Copublishing, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 256
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
ChapterPages
- Contents No access
- Preface No access
- Acknowledgements No access
- List of Contributors No access
- The Collapse in Historical Perspective No access Pages 1 - 18
- Cause of the Collapse of the Communist System: Present Situation and Future Prospects in Hungary No access Pages 19 - 34
- Varieties of Russian Nationalism No access Pages 35 - 80
- Nationalism, Civil Society and Democracy No access Pages 81 - 106
- The Geopolitics of Ethnic Mobilization: Some Theoretical Projections for the Old Soviet Bloc No access Pages 107 - 132
- Protection of the Rights of Minorities―Back to the League of Nations? No access Pages 133 - 148
- Asymmetrical Reciprocity in Market Exchange: Implications for Economies in Transition No access Pages 149 - 164
- Conservative Political Philosophy and the Strategy of Economic Transition No access Pages 165 - 180
- The Role of the State in the Transition to Capitalism No access Pages 181 - 198
- Liberty or Prelude to New Disasters? The Prospects for Post-Revolutionary Central and Eastern Europe No access Pages 199 - 228
- Academe and the Soviet Myth No access Pages 229 - 238
- Why Didn't We Anticipate the Failure of Communism? No access Pages 239 - 256





