1. Civil Society and Income Inequality in Post-Communist Eurasia.
- Author
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Bernhard, Michael and Dong-Joon Jung
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *CIVIL society , *HISTORY - Abstract
This article argues that the strength of civil society at the point of extrication from communism is a powerful predictor of how “liberal democratic” post-communist regimes become. This is based on the impact that an engaged civil society has on the reconfiguration of post-communist elites and the degree to which the model of accumulation permits concentrat on of resources in the hands of previous elites. In cases where civil society was engaged a: the moment of extrication, the elite were disposed to a more liberal model of capitalism which afforded greater social welfare protection. Where civil society was weaker, the elite were able to convert political power into concentrated control of economic assets and a more predatory and inegalitarian model of political capitalism emerged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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