Jozsef Herman's interview with B. Denitch, a Yugoslav born New York professor about Eastern Europe, socialism.
Category Archives: Periodical
No. 5 | (Spring 1990)
Table of contents
- Krausz Tamás : East Europe’s conservative revolutions – Turn in East-Europe: Myth and reality
- Niederhauser Emil : Prologe to Eastern Europe of 1989
- Beatrix Campbell, Mario Telo, John Lloyd, Martin Jacques, Eric J. Hobsbawm : The end of the story
- M. Lengyel László : The Soviet Union: property on the road to becoming collective
- Magyar Péter : Change(s) of strategy of the Italian communist party
- Petr Uhl, Aleksandr Kramer, Vladimir Riha, Egon Bondy, Petr Kuzvart : Movement for a democratic and self-governing socialism
- Kiss Rita : Interview with J. Pinior
- Who are the anarcho-syndicalists and what they want?
- What does the United Left want?
- Hajdu F. András : The chronology of the collapse of a system
- Füzes Oszkár : “Well, whose revolution?” – Romania 1990
- Juhász József : Yugoslavia at crossroads
- Tálas Péter : The Republic on the eve of the 90s
- Thoma László : The society without alternatives
- Herman József : Interview with B. Denitch
- t : The market against democratisation – on books of Catherine Samary
- Documents of Workers’ Councils
- Socialism
- Nation
The market against democratisation – on books of Catherine Samary
Catherine Samary, a professor of the „Dauphine" university in Paris attempts to analyse and interpret the East European systems on the basis of formation theory and through comparing them with contemporary capitalism. The statement should be underlined that the East European economic reforms should be viewed as „a means in the hands of the national bureaucracy to save its own power – that is to prevent a genuine social democratisation". This strata wants to preserve its own privileged position by channelling the reforms to the level of the market and avoid the other alternative of the reform: „the involvement of the masses of people in the control of the economy and society".
(Chaterine Samary: Le Marché contre l'autogestion , Catherine Samary: Plan, marché et démocratie – l'expérience des pays dits socialistes.)
East Europe’s conservative revolutions – Turn in East-Europe: Myth and reality
After the break down of Stalinist structures in Eastern Europe, the left wing may get under the ruins. The revival of conservative traditions, the absolutisation of the messianism of small nations, private property, reprivatization etc. obstructs political democratisation developing into economic democracy. The world economic conditions are unfavourable. Perestroika's contradictory effects. There are time bombs ticking under the new systems: unemployment, poverty, nationalistic conflicts etc.