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MYANT, MARTIN (7) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   029513


Czechoslovak economy 1948-1988: the battle for economic reform / Myant, Martin 1989  Book
Myant Martin. Book
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Publication Cambridge, Cambridge University press., 1989.
Description xii, 316p.
Series Soviet and East European studies
Standard Number 05213531499
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
031501330.9437/MYA 031501MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   110020


International integration, varieties of capitalism and resilien / Myant, Martin; Drahokoupil, Jan   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This article offers a comprehensive analysis of the different effects of the economic crisis from 2008, across all transition economies with a testable framework, that relates vulnerability to specific forms of development since 1989. The key to the framework is the identification of forms of integration into the international economy, with distinctions between different export structures and dependence on other sources of foreign-currency earnings. These created channels for transmission of the crisis which differed between countries. The analysis draws on a three-level research design, combining a variable-oriented regression analysis with case-oriented comparisons among similar cases, and within-case analysis of individual countries.
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3
ID:   084498


New research on february 1948 in Czechoslovakia / Myant, Martin   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
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4
ID:   120666


Political economy of crisis management in East–Central European countries / Myant, Martin; Drahokoupil, Jan; Lesay, Ivan   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The financial and economic crisis in the Central and East European countries raised the profile of economic policy themes that relate to the role of taxation and state spending. The key policy differences related to public budgets and support for a demand stimulus. Responses fall broadly into two categories that we link to a social-democratic and a neo-liberal response. The distinction indicates that the policy responses were linked to the party affiliation of the government on the left-right spectrum. There were some remarkable common trends that cannot be explained by the logical requirements of the economic situation alone. There are differences in timing and in severity, but every country has at some point moved towards a policy of balancing the budget by making cuts. In all cases there were cuts in benefits for marginal groups in society and a switch towards indirect rather than direct taxes. These carry clear distributional implications.
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5
ID:   070173


Regional development and post-Communist politics in a Czech reg / Myant, Martin; Smith, Simon   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract This article links post-communist politics with regional development through an investigation of the formulation of strategic plans at various levels. This is an important activity for compliance with procedures essential to accessing EU financial support, and beyond that, it has significance for the investigation of political relationships. The dominant conclusion is that the communist period and the post-communist transformation left distinctive features that created barriers to the emergence of the 'standard' EU pattern and therefore justifies continued use of the 'post-communist' label. In particular, this is exhibited in a disjointed structure of regional and local administration with weak cooperation between levels. EU prescriptions and involvement have in some respects accentuated the isolation of levels from each other. This article argues that the standard interpretation of the concepts of social capital and partnership needs to be clarified. Above all, it becomes clear that there needs to be recognition and acceptance of the conflicting nature of many relationships and of the bargaining and compromises lying behind a regional strategy and its implementation. The article thereby adds to the literature that has warned against some over-enthusiastic interpretations of social capital and related concepts as providing an unambiguous basis for a region's development
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6
ID:   175635


Terry Cox: An Appreciation / Myant, Martin   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Terry Cox has contributed to the subject area covered by Europe-Asia Studies in multiple ways over a long and varied career. He came to the then Institute of Soviet Studies of Glasgow University in 1969 as a research student, having completed a degree at Durham University in Sociology and Politics. He brought with him interests in rural sociology, Soviet history and political sociology and was looking for a PhD topic related to peasant political consciousness. Alec Nove, the then institute director, suggested a study of the so-called Agrarian Marxists who had been active in developing research on the peasantry in the Soviet Union in the 1920s. The PhD was supervised by Alec jointly with Hillel Ticktin. While pursuing his PhD research, Terry was also awarded a visiting fellowship at the University of Giessen to produce a study of the newly emerging rural sociology in the Soviet Union of the 1960s and 1970s which resulted in his first book (1979a).
Key Words Terry Cox 
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7
ID:   120665


Transition economies after the crisis of 2008: actors and policies / Myant, Martin; Drahokoupil, Jan   Journal Article
Myant, Martin Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract THE ECONOMIC CRISIS OF 2008, STARTING FROM THE CRISIS in banking in the USA, affected economic and political development in varied ways around the world. This collection covers the impact and policy responses in the former state socialist countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Taken as a whole, the economies of the former state socialist countries-frequently still referred to for convenience as transition economies-were hit hard by the crisis, suffering falls in GDP in 2009 that were deeper than the average around the world. However, there was considerable variety in the effects on individual countries, with a few continuing to grow while some others suffered quite exceptional falls in output. Policy responses were also quite diverse and do not obviously fit with the nature and severity of economic factors. The more general impacts on political life were also varied. In many cases very much the same governments continued in power, while in others there were significant changes and signs of a growing instability in party and political structures.
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