10 results on '"Bernhard, Michael"'
Search Results
2. Between Contextualization and Comparison.
- Author
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Kubik, Jan
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CONTEXTUAL analysis , *AREA studies , *POLITICAL science research , *SOCIAL science research , *CULTURAL syncretism - Abstract
The essay introduces five principles of an approach that helps to combine context sensitivity with generalizing ambition necessary for any serious comparative work. It also offers a list of five areas where East European experts are or should be making major contributions to the “general” knowledge while remaining attentive to the “specificities” of their region. It emphasizes a dialogue among scholars of several theoretical and methodological persuasions. Such synthetic/syncretic studies—also in the study of power and politics—may and often do begin with the work of researchers who construct panoramic vistas (via large-N statistical work) and/or reconstruct mechanisms of individual decision making (via game theoretic models). Nevertheless, they cannot do without the work of those who delve into the details of social processes (via sociological analysis); those who decipher the intricacies of meaning creation, transmission, and decoding (via interpretive work); and those who are able to place all of this in proper historical contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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3. Assessing the Role of European Attitudes in Cross-National Research: Does the Post-Communist Context Matter?
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Giurcanu, Magda
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POSTCOMMUNISM , *POSTCOMMUNIST societies , *ELECTIONS , *POLITICAL attitudes ,EASTERN European politics & government, 1989- - Abstract
How does Eastern Europe contribute to the debate over EU’s democratic deficit from an electoral perspective? Does Eastern Europe challenge our theoretical understanding of what motivates European citizens to participate and express their opinions in European Parliamentary elections? While there is no overarching consensus in the academic community regarding these questions, this essay aims to illustrate how a deeper understanding of one post-communist case and a bottom-up perspective on attitudes and political behavior in one locale, Romania, allowed the researcher to delve deeper into the taken-for-granted dynamics that European citizens from the South, East, and West engage in when voting in European Parliamentary elections. The approach of “ethnographic sensibility” mentioned in the workshop’s discussions and illustrated in several contributions to this volume (see e.g. Kubik 2013; Knott 2015) constitutes then a useful starting point in deconstructing conventional knowledge. Moreover, during the process of moving up the ladder of generality and building inferences from one case study to a region, Eastern Europe still shares enough characteristics to deserve its own dummy variable, so to speak, in large-N continent-wide analyses covering the 2004 and 2009 European Parliamentary (EP) elections. Yet, as Joshua Tucker (2015) mentions in his contribution, it is unclear whether the historical legacies discussed at the workshop and further elaborated on by Grigore Pop-Eleches (2015) will continue to play a role in a priori distinguishing Eastern Europeans’ political attitudes and behaviors from other EU citizens in the South or West in future EP elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. Media in the New Democracies of Post-Communist Eastern Europe.
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Kostadinova, Petia
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POSTCOMMUNISM , *MASS media & politics , *POSTCOMMUNIST societies , *DEMOCRACY ,EASTERN European politics & government - Abstract
Growing up in Bulgaria during the “transition” years, as a then fifteen-year old, I spent the summer of 1990 queuing up at the neighborhood newsstand waiting for the daily delivery of freshly printed newspapers. Shortages of goods, including food and gasoline, caused long lines in front of many stores, but the crowd waiting at the kiosk was eager to read about the latest political developments, and especially popular were the newspapers published by the newly established opposition parties. While there was no scarcity of political news via television and radio, there was always something special about the print media, much of which, including entertainment weeklies, were such a novelty. Twenty or so years later, I spent another summer among newspapers, in the archives of the National Library in Sofia, poring through the pages and—with no digitization of archives—collecting photographs of news articles published before each of the national legislative elections since 1990. Much has changed in the media environment since then, yet the study of media in post-communist societies and especially its relations to voters, parties, and politics in general is still in its infancy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. The Spell of Marx and Jeffrey Sachs: Social Theory and Post-Communist Politics.
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Ganev, Venelin I.
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CAPITALISM , *MARXIST philosophy , *POSTCOMMUNISM , *POSTCOMMUNIST societies - Abstract
The article offers a critical analysis of the view that Marx’s critique of capitalism provides the analytical lenses necessary to understand post-communist transformations. The author examines the problematic premises underpinning this view—for example, that capitalism can be created by design, and that in the early 1990s the former “second world” constituted a tabula rasa—and insists that a proper answer to the question “How did capitalism emerge in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union?” is yet to be given. The text also identifies the conceptual, theoretical, and empirical difficulties that might ensue if analyses of post-communist politics are reduced to a critique of neoliberal capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Comparative Opportunities: The Evolving Study of Political Behavior in Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Tucker, Joshua A.
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VOTING , *POLITICAL sociology , *PRACTICAL politics , *POLITICAL science ,EASTERN European politics & government - Abstract
As the theoretical rationale (and funding opportunities!) for considering Eastern Europe as a distinct region diminish as we move farther away from the momentous events of 1989, the value of including East-Central European countries in comparative studies has only increased. This article outlines how comparative studies of political behavior involving East-Central European countries have evolved in the author’s own research from comparative studies including Russia along with four East European countries, to more broadly based comparative studies including multiple East European countries and former Soviet Republics, to studies where behavior is analyzed in both East European countries and more established democracies, and finally to large cross-national studies focused on questions related to post-communist politics (namely, the legacy of communism on post-communist attitudes and behavior) but relying on the comparative analysis of survey data from countries around the world. In a way, the research has come full circle, from studies of East European political behavior to better understand East European political behavior, to studies including East European countries to better understand general questions of political behavior not specific to post-communist countries, to now the most extensive comparative studies that are, however, designed once again to better understand East European political attitudes and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Post-Communism, the Civilizing Process, and the Mixed Impact of Leninist Violence.
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Bernhard, Michael, Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, and Kopstein, Jeffrey
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LENINISM , *VIOLENCE , *POSTCOMMUNIST societies , *DEMOCRACY , *EASTERN European history - Abstract
Leninism and the central role that violence played in it is most commonly presented as a hindrance to democratic development in post-communist Eastern Europe. This paper reconsiders this proposition in light of the classics of comparative historical analysis. These classic works maintain that the long-term consequences of revolutionary violence sometimes counteract its short-term anti-democratic impact. Social change unleashed by revolution can contribute to the emergence of democracy in subsequent periods by removing pre-modern barriers to democracy. Two aspects of Leninist violence are highlighted as having such effects: forced modernization and the civilizing process. Communist modernization altered pre-modern social structures which had served as impediments to democracy prior to the Leninist seizure of power. The resulting social structures and the values reinforced by the communist version of the “civilizing process,” patterned on those of bourgeois conventions of the early twentieth century, helped some post-communist countries overcome obstacles to the introduction of liberal democracy encountered in earlier attempts in the region after World War I. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. The revolutions Of 1989.
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Bernhard, Michael
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REVOLUTIONS , *REFORMS , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
What were the causes and consequences of the revolutions of 1989 in Eastern and Central Europe? The causes lie in the exhaustion of the model of Soviet-type economic organization, the failure of reform efforts in the USSR, and the persistence of opposition to Soviet-type rule in Central Europe. The ramifications of the events are examined through the prism of three questions: (1) how do they change our evaluation of the past?; (2) what was the significance of 1989 as a moment in time?; and (3) how have they shaped the present? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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9. Institutional Choice after Communism: A Critique of Theory-building in an Empirical Wasteland.
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Bernhard, Michael
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POLITICAL science literature , *DEMOCRATIZATION , *COMMUNISM in literature - Abstract
Presents a critical review of political science journals applying the theories of democratization to East European cases. Analysis of literature on postcommunism by non-East Europeans; Empirical inaccuracies presented in the literature; Problems on the interpretation of data in the literature.
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- 2000
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10. Civil society after the first transition: Dilemmas of post-communist democratization in Poland...
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Bernhard, Michael
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CIVIL society , *POSTCOMMUNISM - Abstract
Examines what has happened to civil society in Poland and other post-communist states since the collapse of communist states. Four factors in the weakening of civil society; Demobilization of insurgent civil society; Decapitation through success; Post-totalitarianism; Social transformation.
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- 1996
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