ABSTRACT

While attention has been focused on high-level struggles over control of giant enterprises in China and the former Soviet bloc, a remarkable but underreported revolution has been occurring at the grass-roots level. This volume examines the profiles of entrepreneurs and the patterns of business development in the post-socialist countries Bringing together the perspectives of all the social science disciplines, from anthropology through economics and political science to sociology, the contributors identify the criteria for survival and success of independent businesses in different environments. Their findings shed light not only on the "transition from socialism" at the micro-level, but also on the conditioning effects of different economic, historical, legal, and social conditions on the conduct of independent economic initiatives.

part 1|155 pages

Profiles of Entrepreneurs

chapter 1|36 pages

Joining the Winners

Self-Employment and Stratification in Post-Soviet Russia

chapter 2|27 pages

The Worm and the Caterpillar

The Small Private Sector in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia

chapter 3|17 pages

The Yu Zuomin Phenomenon

Entrepreneurs and Politics in Rural China

chapter 4|21 pages

Security and Enforcement as Private Business

The Conversion of Russia's Power Ministries and Its Institutional Consequences

chapter 5|26 pages

The Construction of a Professional Field

Resources, Skills, and Attributes of Founders of the Market Research Sector in Poland, 1989 to 1997

part 2|190 pages

Patterns of Entrepreneurialism

chapter 7|32 pages

Entrepreneurial Action in the State Sector

The Economic Decisions of Chinese Managers

chapter 10|22 pages

Social Capital and Entrepreneurial Success

Hungarian Small Enterprises Between 1993 and 1996

chapter 11|47 pages

Entrepreneurial Governmentality in Postsocialist Russia

A Cultural Investigation of Business Practices

chapter 12|22 pages

Marketing Civility, Civilizing the Market

Chinese Multilevel Marketing's Challenge to the State