Politics and Society in Eastern EuropeMacmillan Education, 1987 - 474 pages |
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Page 79
... achieved by large increases first in the quantity of labour , and later in the quantity of capital . During the first stage , the large inflow of untrained labour from agriculture to non - agricultural activities must adver- sely affect ...
... achieved by large increases first in the quantity of labour , and later in the quantity of capital . During the first stage , the large inflow of untrained labour from agriculture to non - agricultural activities must adver- sely affect ...
Page 85
... achieved in Bulgaria by 1958 ! Pre - war systems of land- holding and the model of collectivisation adopted also pro- vide part of the explanation for the differing paces and degrees of success of collectivisation . The final ' drive ...
... achieved in Bulgaria by 1958 ! Pre - war systems of land- holding and the model of collectivisation adopted also pro- vide part of the explanation for the differing paces and degrees of success of collectivisation . The final ' drive ...
Page 370
... achieved , such as in Czechoslovakia and the GDR . Also where there are a large number of dispersed industrial locations , a greater symmetry in access to social services is achieved . This is not the case in Poland , Yugoslavia and ...
... achieved , such as in Czechoslovakia and the GDR . Also where there are a large number of dispersed industrial locations , a greater symmetry in access to social services is achieved . This is not the case in Poland , Yugoslavia and ...
Contents
Interwar Eastern Europe | 15 |
War Communism and Stalinism | 48 |
The Structure and Development of Centrally | 68 |
Copyright | |
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achieved activity administration agriculture Albania apparatus became Bulgaria bureaucratic cadre cent central committee centralised Chapter church CMEA collectivisation Communist Party considerable constitutional Council cultural Czechoslovakia decentralisation East European countries Eastern Europe economic reform elections elite enterprise Federal German Hungarian Hungary ideological important increased individual industrial industrialisation inequalities institutions intelligentsia interests interwar labour leaders leadership legitimacy legitimation liberal democratic London major Marxist-Leninist mass membership ment military ministries mobility movement nomenklatura official participation party organisation party-state patterns peasant peasantry period planning Poland Polish Politbureau political systems population position post-war Prague Spring problems production PUWP recruitment regime regional relations Republic role Romania rule sector Sejm self-management social policy socialist societies socialist systems Soviet Union Stalinism Stalinist strategy structure tion trade unions USSR Warsaw Pact West Western workers workforce working-class World Yugoslav Yugoslavia