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      When Ideas Fail
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      Book

      When Ideas Fail

      DOI link for When Ideas Fail

      When Ideas Fail book

      Economic Thought, the Failure of Transition and the Rise of Institutional Instability in Post-Soviet Russia

      When Ideas Fail

      DOI link for When Ideas Fail

      When Ideas Fail book

      Economic Thought, the Failure of Transition and the Rise of Institutional Instability in Post-Soviet Russia
      ByJoachim Zweynert
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2017
      eBook Published 7 November 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203712931
      Pages 154
      eBook ISBN 9780203712931
      Subjects Area Studies, Economics, Finance, Business & Industry
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      Zweynert, J. (2017). When Ideas Fail: Economic Thought, the Failure of Transition and the Rise of Institutional Instability in Post-Soviet Russia (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203712931

      ABSTRACT

      In the history of Russian economic ideas, a peculiar mix of anthropocentrism and holism provided fertile breeding ground for patterns of thought that were in potential conflict with the market. These patterns, did not render the emergence of capitalism in Russia impossible. But they entailed a deep intellectual division between adherents and opponents of Russia’s capitalist transformation that made Russia’s social evolution unstable and vulnerable to external shocks.

      This study offers an ideational explanation of Russia’s relative failure to establish a functioning market economy and thus sets up a new and original perspective for discussion. In post-Soviet Russia, a clash between imported foreground ideas and deep domestic background ideas has led to an ideational division among the elite of the country. Within economic science, this led to the emergence of two thought collectives, (in the sense of Ludvik Fleck), with entirely different understandings of social reality.

      This ideational division translated into incoherent policy measures, the emergence of institutional hybrids and thus, all in all, into institutional instability. Empirically, the book is based on a systematic, qualitative analysis of the writings of Soviet/Russian economists between 1987 and 2012.

      This groundbreaking book makes an important contribution to Central Eastern and Eastern European area studies and to the current debate on ideas and institutions in the social sciences.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|4 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 2|16 pages

      The role of ideas in great transformations

      chapter 3|13 pages

      The legacy of the Brezhnev period: 1971–1986

      chapter 4|16 pages

      Cracking the protective belt: 1987–1992

      chapter 5|15 pages

      Towards a precarious consensus: 1993–1998

      chapter 6|17 pages

      In search of a “Russian Way”: 1999–2006

      chapter 7|14 pages

      A new transition debate: 2007–2012

      chapter 8|3 pages

      Conclusion

      From zastoi to zastoi?
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