The Anatomy of Post-Communist Regimes : : A Conceptual Framework.

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Bibliographic Details
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TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Budapest : : Central European University Press,, 2020.
{copy}2020.
Year of Publication:2020
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (840 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Front Matter
  • title page
  • copyright page
  • Table of contents
  • List of Tables and Figures
  • Acknowledgments
  • Reader's Manual for QR codes
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1. Stubborn Structures
  • 1.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 1.2. Thesis A: Regime Type Depends on the Separation of Spheres of Social Action
  • 1.3. Thesis B: The Separation of Spheres Followed Civilizational Boundaries
  • 1.4. Thesis C: Communist Dictatorships Arrested and Reversed the Separation of Spheres
  • 1.5. Thesis D: Democratization Did Not Change the Separation of Spheres
  • 1.6. Beyond Hybridology: A Triangular Conceptual Space of Regimes
  • 2. State
  • 2.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 2.2. General Definitions: The Basic Concepts of the Framework
  • 2.3. The Dominant Principle of State Functioning
  • 2.4. Conceptualization of States Running on Elite Interest
  • 2.5. Challenges to the Monopoly of Violence
  • 2.6. The Invisible Hand and the Grabbing Hand: A Comparative Framework for State Types
  • 3. Actors
  • 3.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 3.2. The Three Spheres of Social Action
  • 3.3. Political Actors in the Three Polar Type Regimes
  • 3.4. Economic Actors in the Three Polar Type Regimes
  • 3.5. Communal Actors in the Three Polar Type Regimes
  • 3.6. A Ruling Elite of Colluding Spheres: The Adopted Political Family
  • 3.7. The Structure of Elites in the Six Ideal Type Regimes
  • 4. Politics
  • 4.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 4.2. Civil Legitimacy and the Interpretation of the Common Good
  • 4.3. The Institutions of Public Deliberation in the Three Polar Type Regimes
  • 4.4. Defensive Mechanisms: Stability, Erosion, and the Strategies of Consolidating Democracies andAutocracies
  • 5. Economy
  • 5.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 5.2. Relational Economics as a Challenger of the Neoclassical Synthesis
  • 5.3. Relation
  • 5.4. State Intervention
  • 5.5. Ownership.
  • 5.6. Comparative Economic Systems
  • 6. Society
  • 6.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 6.2. The Level of Social Structures: Networks and Societal Patronalization
  • 6.3. The Stability of Power and Mass Political Persuasion
  • 6.4. The Level of Discourses: Ideology and the Political Market
  • 6.5. Modalities of Informal Governance: A Summary
  • 7. Regimes
  • 7.1. Guide to the Chapter
  • 7.2. The Triangular Framework: Defining the Six Ideal Type Regimes
  • 7.3. Regime Dynamics: A Typology with Modelled Trajectories of Twelve Post-Communist Countries
  • 7.4. Beyond Regime Specificities: Country and Policy-Specific Features
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • Back cover.