Green Barons, Force-of-Circumstance Entrepreneurs, Impotent Mayors

Green Barons, Force-of-Circumstance Entrepreneurs, Impotent Mayors

Rural Change in the Early Years of Post-Socialist Capitalist Democracy

  • Autor: Swain, Nigel
  • Editor: Central European University Press
  • ISBN: 9786155225703
  • eISBN Pdf: 9786155225710
  • Lugar de publicación:  Budapest , Hungria
  • Año de publicación digital: 2013
  • Mes: Octubre
  • Páginas: 414
  • DDC: 338.10947/091734
  • Idioma: Ingles
An exemplary study in comparative contemporary history, this monograph looks at rural change in six countries: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia. In the 1990s most of these nations experienced a fourth radical restructuring of agricultural relations in the twentieth century, and all went through the dramatic transition from communism to capitalism. The author analyzes attempts to activate democracy on a local level and recreate farming structures and non-agricultural businesses based on private ownership and private enterprise. He describes the emergence of a new business class that seeks to dominate local government structures; the recuperation of former communist farming entities by former managers; and the transformation of peasants into rural citizens, who nevertheless remain the underdogs. Swain exposes common features as well as specific divergences between the six countries; he portrays the winners, losers and engineers of transformations. He situates his themes in a wider context that will appeal to a broad range of social scientists and historians.
  • Cover
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Tables and Maps
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1. Politics, Policies and Legal Measures
    • The National Politics of Early Post-Socialism
      • Poland
      • Hungary
      • Czechoslovakia and the Czech and Slovak Republics
      • Bulgaria
      • Romania
    • Privatisation and Restitution Policies
      • Czechoslovakia and the Czech and Slovak Republics
      • Hungary
      • Poland
      • Romania
      • Bulgaria
    • Co-operative Restructuring
      • Co-operative transformation legislation
      • Legacies of collectivisation and their consequences
    • Creating a Local Democratic Politics
      • Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic
      • Slovakia
      • Hungary
      • Poland
      • Romania
      • Bulgaria
    • The Research Moment
  • 2. Common General Findings
    • The Restructuring of Agriculture
      • Green barons and others
      • Rural structure in the mid-1990s
    • The Non-Farm Economy
    • Local Government
      • Inexperience
      • Impotence
    • Rural Communities and Civil Society
  • 3. Bulgaria
    • Contested Co-operative Liquidation
      • Co-operative livestock farming saved—Pripek
      • Livestock destroyed, a belated successor co-operative and ‘elastic’ land—Dragana
      • Co-operative livestock retained against the odds—Slivka
      • A successful co-operative on a reduced scale—Kupen
      • Continuity but post-socialist loss of livestock—Breze
      • A spectrum of ‘red’, ‘blue’ and family—Venets
      • Problems of a private farmer—Breze
    • Local Authorities—Coping with Post-Socialist Recession
      • A commune centre mayor’s socialist paternalism—Kupen
      • Salvaging agriculture and its services—kmetstvo villages
    • The Destruction of Socialist Mountain Communities—Blagun and Chala
    • The Non-Farm Economy—New Businesses and a Cushion for Local Employment
    • Bulgarian Specificities in Summary
  • 4. Czech Republic
    • Agricultural Transformations—Uncontested, Acrimonious and Scandalous
      • Uncontested transformation—Rodáky, Nezávislice, Lesovice, Bárov-Chůzovany
      • A scandalous transformation—Výletnice
      • An acrimonious transformation—Tvrz nad Řekou
    • Contested Transformation in Agriculture and Protracted Non-Farm Privatisation—Městysov
    • Non-Farm Transformations—Protracted and Serendipitous
      • A glass works, a sawmill and the House of Culture—Nová Huť
      • Serendipitous restitutions and a late-socialist innovation—Lesovice
    • Independent But at a Loss—Contrasting Village Development Strategies
      • A newly independent commuter village—Nezávislice
      • A fuzzy public–private divide—Lesovice
      • A successful business strategy and business vs ecology lobbies—Rodáky
      • Traditional rural tourism—Výletnice
    • Contrasts in Optimism and Envy—Bárov and Chůzovany
    • Czech Specificities in Summary
  • 5. Hungary
    • Agricultural Transformation—Bankruptcy, Subterfuge and Paths to Private Farming
      • Contrived bankruptcy—Korcona
      • ‘Second economy’ to private farming—Szálfa
      • Voluntary liquidation and two successful successors—Pakucs
      • Bankruptcy and subterfuge—Tabar
      • A modus vivendi between co-operative and private—Károlyháza
      • A Smallholders’ policy that failed—Dombház
      • Co-operative continuity—Szálfa
    • The Non-Farm Economy
      • Small family businesses—contrasting fates in Pakucs and Tabar
      • Larger-scale new business success—Károlyháza and Zádorpuszta
      • ‘Socialist personal services gap’ family businesses—Korcona
    • Local Government and Local Development Policy
      • Independence, control of schooling and promoting tourism unsuccessfully—Kissikonda
      • Ambivalent links with private business—Károlyháza and Kissikonda
      • The emergence of a business block—Székhely, Korcona,Tabar, Zádorpuszta
    • Hungarian Specificities in Summary
  • 6. Poland
    • Agricultural Transformation—State Farm Privatisations and Specialists
      • From manager to owner—Zalew and Lusowo
      • Other privatisations—Głaz, Bawełna, Zamek
      • From socialist specialist to commercial farmer—Zamek and Bawełna
    • Local Authorities and Regime Change
      • From a clerical to a commercial regime—Bawełna
      • Clerical influence and intrusion—Pola, Bory and Cukier
      • Continuities, innovations and the PSL—Głaz, Pola, Kanał
      • ‘Teachers’, ‘farmers’ and rural tourism—Bory
    • The Non-Farm Economy
      • Solidarity-influenced privatisation—Cukier
      • Insiders and outsiders in the face of disappearing socialist certainties—Kanał
      • An old new business hostile to the socialist mayor—Głaz
    • The Peculiarities of a Non-EU Border Community—Sedno
      • State farm privatisation—with a little help from the border
      • Town and village councils and the border tax
      • Other border benefits
    • Polish Specificities in Summary
  • 7. Romania
    • Agricultural Transformation
      • Smooth progression from co-operative to association—Lipova and Purani
      • A failed association—Colibaşi
      • Pre-socialist landholding vs machinery—Horia, Lipova and Mägura
      • Agromec as farmer—Mägura
      • A large-scale private farmer—Remetea
    • The Non-Farm Economy—Modest Developments
    • Extreme Impotence at the Local Level
      • The Catholic priest and the doctor—Plopeni
      • The Reform Church pastor and political patronage—Mica
      • A vibrant community culture under threat—Mägura
      • Patronage, incompetence and despair—Buneşti, Colibaşiand Horia
    • Romanian Specificities in Summary
  • 8. Slovakia
    • Agricultural Transformation—Variations on the Theme of Continuity
      • Co-operative demergers—Hora, Habán, Zurča, Ľupta, Bánec
      • Continuity without demerging—Palina and Krížava
      • Continuity, secession and one private farmer—Lehota
      • Client and co-operative privatisation—Klanec
    • The Non-Farm Economy
      • A brand new big business in a village of pensioners and Roma—Palina
      • Co-operatives as business parks—Klanec
      • Smaller-scale successful new businesses—Lehota, Ľupta, Krížava
      • Mixed success plugging the socialist personal services gap—Zurča and Ľupta
      • Protracted privatisation and commuting to the Czech Republic—Krížava and Lehota
    • Local Authority Businesses and Accommodations to Central Power
      • Continuity and change—Klanec
      • A new non-market business elite—Krížava
      • Flexible political allegiances—Krížava, Zurča and Ľupta
      • Fuzzy ownership and its consequences—Habán
      • Problems of football sponsorship, tourism and promoting a hotel—Bánec
      • Developing a village ‘with no development prospects’—Hora
      • A change of mayor and perhaps a change of prospects—Lehota
    • Slovak Specificities in Summary
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index of Research Villages
  • General Index
  • Back cover

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