849 research outputs found
The New Grand Bourgeoisie under Post-Communism: Central Europe, Russia and China Compared
In the former socialist redistributive economies, the transition to market economy and the conversion to private ownership followed different trajectories. The paper offers an overview on how a new class of grand bourgeoisie was formed in three differentpost-socialism, transitional economies, wealth, privatization, bourgeoisie
Möglichkeiten und Grenzen des Projekts einer neuen Klasse in Osteuropa: Selbstkritische Ăberlegungen zu »Die Intelligenz auf dem Weg zur Klassenmacht«
1974 vertraten Szelenyi und Konrad die Ansicht, daĂ sich die Intellektuellen in Osteuropa auf dem Weg zur Klassenherrschaft befĂ€nden. Hier interpretiert Szelenyi seine damaligen Thesen als Reaktion auf die Reformen der 60er Jahre. DaĂ sich seine Prognosen nicht realisierten,fĂŒhrt er einerseits auf den von ihm unterschĂ€tzten Widerstand der BĂŒrokratie gegen jede Teilung der Macht zurĂŒck. Andererseits fand seit 1975 mit der Entstehung kleiner Privatunternehmen ein unvorhergesehener sozialer Wandel statt, der eine sowohl im privaten Marktsektor als auch im bĂŒrokratisch gesteuerten Bereich begrĂŒndete »duale« Klassenstruktur mit sich brachte. Sich daraus ergebende mögliche BĂŒndniskonstellationen diskutiert Szeleny am Ende seines Artikels
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The Utopia of Postsocialist Theory and the Ironic View of History in Neoclassical Sociology
Michael Burawoy offers three thought-provoking criticisms of our book, Making Capitalism without Capitalists: Class Formation and Elite Struggles in Post-Communist Central Europe: (1) that we abandon class analysis, (2) that we do not suggest an alternative to the present capitalist order, and, therefore, (3) that our âneoclassical sociologyâ abandons the critical vision of classical sociology. At this abstract level, we plead not guilty to all three charges. Moving beyond these abstractions, we reformulate Burawoyâs criticisms empirically, and ask the following questions: 1. Is interclass struggle the central cause of social change in the transformation from communism to capitalism? 2. Using social scientific tools, can we identify a noncapitalist (or to be less shy about it, a socialist) alternative to the âactually existingâ socioeconomic systems of the postcommunist world? 3. Is it necessary to have a vantage point âoutsideâ a system to critically analyze its mechanisms and dynamics? Burawoy answers these questions in the affirmative; our answer to each is an emphatic no
Evaluation of a new cortical strip electrode for intraoperative somatosensory monitoring during perirolandic brain surgery
OBJECTIVE: During neurosurgical procedures, strip electrodes should have low impedance and sufficient adherence on the brain surface. We evaluated the signal quality, safety, and performance of a novel strip electrode (WISE Cortical Strip, WCSÂź), with conductive electrode contacts created with platinum nanoparticles embedded in a polymer base.
METHODS: In a multicenter interventional, non-inferiority study, we compared WCS to a conventional strip electrode (Ad-Tech). We recorded impedance and somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) and determined the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). We performed direct stimulation of the motor cortex. An external clinical event committee rated safety and adverse events and users rated usability.
RESULTS: During 32 brain surgeries in the paracentral region, WCS was rated safe and effective in signal transmission. Two seizure events were classified as probably related to the stimulation with WCS. The users rated WCS adhesion to the brain as satisfactory but reported difficulties sliding the WCS under the dura. The median (IQR) impedance of WCS was lower than for Ad-Tech: 2.7 (2.3-3.7) vs 5.30 (4.3-6.6) kΩ (p < 0.005). The SNR of SEP was non-inferior for WCS compared to Ad-Tech.
CONCLUSIONS: The impedance of WCS was lower than Ad-Tech without safety limitations. In small craniotomies not exposing the motor cortex its use may be limited.
SIGNIFICANCE: Low impedance electrodes facilitate recordings with high SNR
East central European urbanization: a political economy of the world-system perspective
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73059/1/j.1468-2427.1989.tb00138.x.pd
The gendered effects of foreign investment and prolonged state ownership on mortality in Hungary: an indirect demographic, retrospective cohort study.
BACKGROUND: Research on the health outcomes of globalisation and economic transition has yielded conflicting results, partly due to methodological and data limitations. Specifically, the outcomes of changes in foreign investment and state ownership need to be examined using multilevel data, linking macro-effects and micro-effects. We exploited the natural experiment offered by the Hungarian economic transition by means of a multilevel study designed to address these gaps in the scientific literature. METHODS: For this indirect demographic, retrospective cohort study, we collected multilevel data related to Hungary between 1995 and 2004 from the PrivMort database and other sources at the town, company, and individual level to assess the relation between the dominant company ownership of a town and mortality. We grouped towns into three ownership categories: dominant state, domestic private, and foreign ownership. We did population surveys in these towns to collect data on vital status and other characteristics of survey respondents' relatives. We assessed the relation between dominant ownership and mortality at the individual level. We used discrete-time survival modelling, adjusting for town-level and individual-level confounders, with clustered SEs. FINDINGS: Of 83 eligible towns identified, we randomly selected 52 for inclusion in the analysis and analysed ownership data from 262 companies within these towns. Additionally, between June 16, 2014, and Dec 22, 2014, we collected data on 78â622 individuals from the 52 towns, of whom 27â694 were considered eligible. After multivariable adjustment, we found that women living in towns with prolonged state ownership had significantly lower odds of dying than women living in towns dominated by domestic private ownership (odds ratio [OR] 0·74, 95% CI 0·61-0·90) or by foreign investment (OR 0·80, 0·69-0·92). INTERPRETATION: Prolonged state ownership was associated with protection of life chances during the post-socialist transformation for women. The indirect economic benefits of foreign investment do not translate automatically into better health without appropriate industrial and social policies. FUNDING: The European Research Council
Mortality in Transition: Study Protocol of the PrivMort Project, a multilevel convenience cohort study.
BACKGROUND: Previous research using routine data identified rapid mass privatisation as an important driver of mortality crisis following the collapse of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe. However, existing studies on the mortality crisis relying on individual level or routine data cannot assess both distal (societal) and proximal (individual) causes of mortality simultaneously. The aim of the PrivMort Project is to overcome these limitations and to investigate the role of societal factors (particularly rapid mass privatisation) and individual-level factors (e.g. alcohol consumption) in the mortality changes in post-communist countries. METHODS: The PrivMort conducts large-sample surveys in Russia, Belarus and Hungary. The approach is unique in comparing towns that have undergone rapid privatisation of their key industrial enterprises with those that experienced more gradual forms of privatisation, employing a multi-level retrospective cohort design that combines data on the industrial characteristics of the towns, socio-economic descriptions of the communities, settlement-level data, individual socio-economic characteristics, and individuals' health behaviour. It then incorporates data on mortality of different types of relatives of survey respondents, employing a retrospective demographic approach, which enables linkage of historical patterns of mortality to exposures, based on experiences of family members. By May 2016, 63,073 respondents provided information on themselves and 205,607 relatives, of whom 102,971 had died. The settlement-level dataset contains information on 539 settlements and 12,082 enterprises in these settlements in Russia, 96 settlements and 271 enterprises in Belarus, and 52 settlement and 148 enterprises in Hungary. DISCUSSION: In addition to reinforcing existing evidence linking smoking, hazardous drinking and unemployment to mortality, the PrivMort dataset will investigate the variation in transition experiences for individual respondents and their families across settlements characterized by differing contextual factors, including industrial characteristics, simultaneously providing information about how excess mortality is distributed across settlements with various privatization strategies.The study was funded by European Research Council (a competitive externally
peer reviewed Advanced Grant Scheme, grant agreement No. 269036).This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from BioMed Central at http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-016-3249-
Insect chemical ecology: chemically mediated interactions and novel applications in agriculture
Forum PaperInsect chemical ecology (ICE) evolved as a discipline concerned with plantâinsect interactions, and also with a strong
focus on intraspecific pheromone-mediated communication. Progress in this field has rendered a more complete picture of
how insects exploit chemical information in their surroundings in order to survive and navigate their world successfully.
Simultaneously, this progress has prompted new research questions about the evolution of insect chemosensation and related
ecological adaptations, molecular mechanisms that mediate commonly observed behaviors, and the consequences of chemically
mediated interactions in different ecosystems. Themed meetings, workshops, and summer schools are ideal platforms
for discussing scientific advancements as well as identifying gaps and challenges within the discipline. From the 11th to the
22nd of June 2018, the 11th annual PhD course in ICE was held at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)
Alnarp, Sweden. The course was made up of 35 student participants from 22 nationalities (Fig. 1a) as well as 32 lecturers.
Lectures and laboratory demonstrations were supported by literature seminars, and four broad research areas were covered:
(1) multitrophic interactions and plant defenses, (2) chemical communication focusing on odor sensing, processing, and
behavior, (3) disease vectors, and (4) applied aspects of basic ICE research in agriculture. This particular article contains a
summary and brief synthesis of these main emergent themes and discussions from the ICE 2018 course. In addition, we also
provide suggestions on teaching the next generation of ICE scientists, especially during unprecedented global situationsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Social democracy, embeddedness and decommodification: On the conceptual innovations and intellectual affiliations of Karl Polanyi
Of the several debates that revolve around the work of the economic historian and political economist Karl Polanyi, one that continues to exercise minds concerns his analysis of, and political attitudes toward, post-war capitalism and the welfare state. Simplified a little, it is a debate with two sides. To borrow IvĂĄn SzelĂ©nyi's terms, one side constructs a âhardâ Karl Polanyi, the other a âsoftâ one. The former advocated a socialist mixed economy dominated by redistributive mechanisms. He was a radical socialist for whom the market should never be the dominant mechanism of economic coordination. His âsoftâ alter ego insisted that the market system remain essentially intact but be complemented by redistributive mechanisms. The âdouble movementâ â the central thesis of his âGreat Transformationâ â acts, in this reading, as a self-correcting mechanism that moderates the excesses of market fundamentalism; its author was positioned within the social-democratic mainstream for which the only realistic desirable goal is a regulated form of capitalism. In terms of textual evidence there is much to be said for both interpretations. In this article I suggest a different approach, one that focuses upon the meaning of Polanyi's concepts in relation to their socio-political and intellectual environment
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