1st Edition

Global Trends in Eastern Europe

By Nikolai Genov Copyright 2010
    246 Pages
    by Routledge

    246 Pages
    by Routledge

    Eastern Europe was once clearly defined by the centralized political and economic organization of the societies in the region. They shared the same official ideology and were members of the same alliances. After 1989, the region collapsed in an economic, political and cultural implosion. What were the moving forces of this profound change? What are its consequences? Could we try to reasonably foresee any future developments? In this thought-provoking book, Nikolai Genov presents a systematic description and explanation of Eastern European societal transformations after 1989. They are interpreted as adaptations to four global trends; upgrading the rationality of organizations; individualization; spreading of instrumental activism; and universalization of value-normative systems. Adaptations to these trends have generally been successful. However, Genov notes that the process is marked by many failures as well. They are mostly caused by path dependency in the societal development and by the varying quality of relevant decisions, other destructive developments are due to contradictions in the global trends themselves. Guided by the assumption that the societal and supranational integration mechanisms in Eastern Europe before 1989 could not resist the overwhelming power of global trends, Genov's controversial findings question visions about the end of history and simultaneously strengthen the confidence that most complex macro-social processes can be rationally managed. A timely book allowing for a much needed engagement in contemporary debates on the controversial processes in Eastern European transitions.

    Chapter 1 Globalization and Regional Development: Social Reality and Social Science Concepts; Chapter 2; Chapter 3 Individualization versus the Common Good; Chapter 4 Instrumental Activism and Sustainability?; Chapter 5 Universalization and Part Icularisms in the Value-normative Systems; Chapter 6 Conceptualizing Social Dynamics;

    Biography

    Nikolai Genov is Professor of Sociology at the Free University Berlin, Germany

    'Nikolai Genov deftly illuminates the complex interplay of long-established social codes and contemporary transformations in Eastern Europe. This is first-class comparative sociological analysis.' Jean-Pascal Daloz, University of Oxford, UK 'A penetrating, well-documented and intellectually honest appraisal of the implosion of Eastern European countries and its economic, political and cultural causes and consequences twenty years later.' Alberto Martinelli, University of Milan, Italy