This paper investigates the coping strategies of post-1989 East Central European transnational migrant entrepreneurs. Paradoxically, rather than facilitating transfer into the region of liberal-democratic orientations and practices, the incorporation of East Central Europe into late 20th-century consumer capitalism based on short-cycle flexible production in sectors unregulated by legal-institutional frameworks reproduces some of the features of the accustomed homo sovieticus syndrome: in particular, the reliance on the beat-the-system/bend-therules orientation on informal/crony patronage and connections, and immediate consumption rather than deferred gratification/investment-oriented capital accumulation renders effective strategies of economic action in the new situation. The effects of so-informed transnational migrant entrepreneurs' activities on the transformation processes in their home-countries are also discussed.
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December 1999
Research Article|
December 01 1999
The malleable homo sovieticus: transnational entrepreneurs in post-communist East Central Europe
Ewa Morawska
Ewa Morawska
*
University of Pennsylvania, Department of Sociology, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6299, USA
* Fax: +1-215-573-2081.
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* Fax: +1-215-573-2081.
Communist and Post-Communist Studies (1999) 32 (4): 359–378.
Citation
Ewa Morawska; The malleable homo sovieticus: transnational entrepreneurs in post-communist East Central Europe. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 December 1999; 32 (4): 359–378. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-067X(99)00022-7
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