Property in East Central Europe
Penulis
: Hannes Siegrist and Dietmar Müller
Subyek
: Land tenure--Europe, Eastern--History--20th century, Land tenure--Poland--History--20th
century, Land tenure--Romania--History--20th century, Land tenure--Yugoslavia--History--
20th century. 5. Right of property--Europe, Eastern--History--20th century. 6. Real property--
Europe, Eastern--History--20th century. 7. Post-communism--Europe, Eastern--History--20th
century, Europe, Eastern--Social conditions Europe, Eastern--Economic
conditions, Europe, Eastern--Politics and government
Penerbit
: Berghahn Books
Ringkasan :The epoch-making events of 1989 led to a spectacular renaissance of private
property rights as a value and institution in the societies of Eastern Europe. In
the minds of post-communist elites, shifting away from the statist socialist system
would, in addition to changing the political system to parliamentary democracy,
deeply affect the socio-economic and cultural sphere by restructuring society as the
domain of private property owners. This great expectation indicates that the issue
of property rights remains key to understanding the history of modern states and
societies.1 In the present volume, historians, lawyers and cultural anthropologists
analyse the issue of landownership in twentieth-century East Central Europe to
understand and explain how and why Poles, Romanians and Serbs shape and use
proprietary institutions in projects of social, political, economic, cultural and legal
‘modernization’. Their contributions show why societies that were largely dependent
on agriculture well into the twentieth century have adapted traditional forms
and developed hybrid and new types of property.2 Special attention is devoted to
the years around 1918, 1945 and 1989, when concepts of property and the role of
property rights in the social and political sphere changed fundamentally.
This volume analyses the social, cultural, economic, legal and political
meanings and functions of property rights in East Central Europe, investigating
processes, structures, institutions, practices and mentalities in short-, mid- and
long-term historical perspectives and at the macro-, meso- and micro-levels.
Through comparative analyses of cases from three different countries, and of
the institutional transfers between them, it aims to improve understanding
of differences and similarities between nations, sub-national regions and transnational property cultures, and to help overcome some of the idiosyncrasies
of single-nation historiographies, which rarely look across borders. At the
same time, it challenges certain stereotypes in the international and Western
historiography of East Central Europe
Daftar copy :
No. |
Barcode |
Lokasi |
No. Rak |
Ketersediaan |
1 |
00131452 |
Perpustakaan Pusat |
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TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |
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