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Understanding the “footprint of state socialism” in east central European post-socialism

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Human Affairs

Abstract

The paper outlines the debate on European state socialism as a social and political order. There are different attempts to obtain a better understanding of the core principles of this type of society and a continuing public debate on it. Following the end of the decade of the transition from “socialism to capitalism” we can observe a renewal in the debates on the “Ancient regime” and its heritage. There are different reasons for this phenomenon; these include new insights from the archives and the recent politics on history in post-socialist societies. The new “zeitgeist” following the world financial crisis of 2008 might be an additional reason. The issues that developed are discussions on the nature of state socialism, some hypotheses on the role of reformers within the changes to late socialism from the perspective of political science, and some assumptions on the methods adopted by former reform socialists after 1989.

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Correspondence to Dieter Segert.

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The paper was completed for a lecture at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for European History and Public Spheres in Vienna in January 2013. The first version of the lecture was given at the Aleksanteri Institute (Helsinki) in May 2011 when I held a research fellowship at this institute. I would like to thank the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for the invitation to the seminar. The research fellowship at the Aleksanteri Institute was also very important, which gave me an opportunity to study the topic in depth, and where I received helpful comments on the lecture, especially the critical arguments of Muriel Blaive, Markku Kivinen, Katalin Miklossy, Margarita Balmaceda and Vesa Oittinen.

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Segert, D. Understanding the “footprint of state socialism” in east central European post-socialism. Humaff 23, 416–428 (2013). https://doi.org/10.2478/s13374-013-0138-0

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