951 research outputs found

    Factory Unions Facing Asset- Strippers in Post-Communist Romania and Ukraine: An Overview of Strategies

    Full text link
    "The paper supplements the literature on post-communist organized labor with a systematic comparison of union strategies towards employers at the plant level, in the metal sector throughout the 2000s (in Romania and Ukraine). It shows how unions can bring employers to the negotiation table, and highlights strategic elements that allow unions to act in support of their members even when facing the biggest difficulties, brought by collapsing economic sectors and dwindling employer interest in production. The paper’s novel contribution lies in uncovering how trade unions cast their strategies in terms of constituting disruption to force their opponents to accept at least parts of their demands." [author's abstract

    Mental Maps of Eastern Europe: States, Mentalities, Modernisation

    Get PDF
    Eastern Europe has been the object of orientalising discourses portraying it as a region defined by problematic statehood, underdevelopment, and nationalist-religious warmongering. These discourses have produced 19th-century mental maps of Europe contrasting a perceived ‘core’ European area ending with the Frankish Empire's eastern border and coinciding with later Enlightenment influence and an indistinct ‘Orient’ or ‘East’, bypassed by “modernising” processes. This contribution focuses on (post-)Cold War discourses in social science and shows how these discourses re-produce 19th-century layers of orientalising map-making and keep East-West differences alive by tracing deficient, fragile or repressive state institutions back to alleged Eastern European ‘mentalities’

    All the Roads to Market: The Soviet Union, China and the World Bank’s Narrative of Capitalism

    Get PDF
    This essay explores the consequences of postcommunist economic reform for narratives about capitalism, using the example of World Bank discourse. It shows how the World Bank’s capitalism narrative has changed to reflect post-Soviet reform complications and the growing Sino–(post-)Soviet contrast. While the capitalism narrative struggles to show that there is one (global) capitalism or market economy model, reform anomalies and the Sino–(post-)Soviet contrast turn the model into a complex political–economic hybrid. Simultaneously, the interplay between the capitalism narrative and reform anomalies highlights the World Bank’s relevance for neoliberal ideational production

    The return of economic nationalism to East Central Europe: Right-wing intellectual milieus and anti-liberal resentment

    Get PDF
    This article emphasises the non-economic goals of economic nationalism and in particular its often overlooked political goals. Drawing parallels between economic nationalisms in Central Europe and East Asia, it focuses on Poland and Hungary and asks why did these countries turn to economic nationalism. The article traces this turn to ideational foundations developed by right-wing intellectuals over the last two decades, arguing that right-wing intellectuals believed that liberalism has failed what they conceived of its most important (political) purpose, the need of a radical break with the communist past. Based on a study of the writings and careers of leading Polish and Hungarian right-wing intellectuals, the article draws attention to the nature of the perceived threat to the nation. It contributes to the sociology of nationalism an analysis of how such a threat emerges and translates into a guiding idea of illiberal economic policies

    The Two Faces of the ‘Global Right’: Revolutionary Conservatives and National-Conservatives

    Get PDF
    Studies of the Global Right usually trace its intellectual underpinnings to the revolutionary conservative New Right and its ideas claiming to defend an ‘ethno-pluralist’ European identity from the multiculturalist threat of a ‘Great Replacement’ through immigration. A second lineage, which we refer to as ‘national-conservative’, is less explored and is more concerned with threats to moral order and the loss of moral bearing due to liberalism’s relativism. These two intellectual lineages, and corresponding political alignments, engender different political projects of the Global Right, which is not that coherent as it seems. Taking a long-term historical-ideational perspective that underlines the power of ideologies as templates, we argue that a closer look at the different intellectual traditions of the Global Right can help explain the contrasting political preferences for socio-economic action, institution-building and transnational cooperation

    From the Qualities of Products to the Qualities of Relations: Value Conventions in the Solidarity Economy in Sicily

    Get PDF
    This article explores the “quality battlefield” in the food economy – the dispute over value conventions between mainstream business actors and alternative food networks. It shows how actors in one particular alternative network – the solidarity economy – shift such notions from product qualities to the qualities of relations in production. Opposing the standardized criteria characterizing private certification schemes and organic certification, they struggle to establish the value of their products by creating and circulating verifiable stories proving their involvement in the solidarity economy. These stories further emphasize the distance to standard business motivations, for instance by accentuating the cooperative rather than competitive relations with other producers. The article illustrates the features and tensions of value conventions in alternative food networks by contrasting actors in mainstream agriculture with an expanding organization of agricultural producers adhering to solidarity economy and operating in the grocery sector in Sicily, Italy

    Mean Mutual Information Based Adaptive Modulation and Coding Mechanism for Cooperative Relaying in Wireless Systems

    Get PDF
    Abstract. We propose a link adaptation algorithm for cooperative transmissions in an OFDMAbased wireless system. The link adaptation method selects the transmission type (cooperative or noncooperative), the modulation orders and amount and type of redundancy required to ensure a target block error rate at each phase of the cooperative transmission. The above parameter-values are chosen so as to minimize the number of occupied time-frequency radio resources required to transmit the Kbit log data block. The algorithm employs a BLER performance prediction method based on mutual information. The proposed link adaptation algorithm has linear complexity, but still provides a very good performance, as shown by simulation results

    4-Benzyl­piperazin-1-ium chloride chloro­form solvate

    Get PDF
    The ions of the title chloro­form-solvated salt, C11H17N2 +·Cl−·CHCl3, are linked by a strong N—H⋯Cl hydrogen bond; the solvent mol­ecule also inter­acts with the chloride ion through a C—H⋯Cl hydrogen bond. Additionally, neighboring cations form weak hydrogen bonds to the anion, resulting in a supra­molecular ribbon that runs along the a axis
    • 

    corecore