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E-grāmata: Post-totalitarian Societies in Transformation: From Systemic Change into European Integration

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"This study considers the multidimensional nature of the construction of the active civil society in the post-totalitarian reality of Central and Eastern Europe, covering the period of systemic transformations in the region in 1989 to the EU accession of2004. The analysis was carried out using a multidisciplinary research perspective which incorporates historical, sociological, and legal insights, as well as those from political science. The volume illustrates the dynamic character of the process of constructing an active civil society process in a broader comparative perspective against the background of post-totalitarian societies, Germany and Italy, which underwent the process of democratic transformation in 1945 and went on to actively forge the European Community in the 1950s"--

This study considers the multidimensional nature of the construction of the active civil society in the post-totalitarian reality of Central and Eastern Europe, covering the period of systemic transformations in the region in 1989 to the EU accession of 2004. The analysis was carried out using a multidisciplinary research perspective which incorporates historical, sociological, and legal insights, as well as those from political science. The volume illustrates the dynamic character of the process of constructing an active civil society process in a broader comparative perspective against the background of post-totalitarian societies, Germany and Italy, which underwent the process of democratic transformation in 1945 and went on to actively forge the European Community in the 1950s.



This study considers the multidimensional nature of the construction of the active civil society in the post-totalitarian reality of Central and Eastern Europe, covering the period of systemic transformations in the region in 1989 to the EU accession of 2004. The analysis was carried out using a multidisciplinary research perspective.

Introduction 7(12)
Joanna Sondel-Cedarmas
Grzegorz Pozarlik
Elzbieta M. Mach
Part One From Systemic change to European integration
Post-totalitarian societies in Western Europe: A comparative case study analysis of Italy and Germany
19(22)
Joanna Sondel-Cedarmas
Witold Stankowski
Models of systemic-economic transformation in Central and Eastern Europe
41(14)
Tadeusz Kopyi
European socio-political and cultural changes after 2004 in the context of the shaping of active citizenship
55(18)
Elzbieta M. Mach
Zdzislaw Mach
Part Two Models of political transformation, reconstruction of the rule of law and politics of memory
Denazification in the BRD/DDR: An Oudine of the Legal Aspects
73(22)
Witold Kulesza
A difficult inheritance:' On the defascistization of public space in Italy in 1946-2019
95(28)
Joanna Sondel-Cedarmas
The phantom revolution of 1989 in Poland
123(20)
Tomasz Scheffler
The legacy of the Polish People's Republic in the doctrine and constitutional law in the first years of Poland's transformation
143(18)
Ewa Kozerska
The Czech memory of the most important figures and events of the communist period in Czechoslovakia (1945-1989)
161(16)
Krzysztof Kozbiat
Memory of a difficult past in Hungary: The Holocaust and the Treaty of Trianon
177(22)
Tadeusz Kopys
Part Three Rebuilding social ties and shaping active European citizenship in post-totalitarian societies
From a divided society to a united and European one: The reunification of Germany, the transformation in East Germany and Germany in Europe
199(20)
Witold Stankowski
Citizenship skills: A historical perspective in the European and Italian context
219(22)
Andrea Natalini
Antonella Nuzzaci
Paola Rizzi
The sociological vacuum in Poland: Reflections 30 years after the transformation
241(22)
Pawel Kubicki
Civil society in post-1989 Poland as a contentious society: Systemic transformation and the Europeanisation of civil society
263(16)
Grzegorz Pozarlik
The shaping of active european citizenship in the Slovak society
279(14)
Jana Pecntkovd
Daniela Maliiovd
The social determinants of political change in Hungary and its perception of the European Union (1989-2018)
293(20)
Tadeusz Kopyi
Preparing students for life in a common Europe: Reflections from Poland 17 years after the expansion of the EU
313
Elzbieta M. Mach
Elbieta M. Mach is Assistant Professor at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. Her research focuses on the development of educational systems.



Grzegorz Poarlik is Senior Lecturer and at the Jagiellonian Universitys Institute of European Studies. His research focuses on the sociology of power, international security in the Post-Cold War era, and the civil society.



Joanna Sondel-Cedarmas is Associate Professor of Political Science at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland. Her research interests include Nationalism, Fascism, and the Far Right, as well as the memory of totalitarianism and authoritarianism.