This volume aims to contribute to the historicization of the post-1989 transformation period in East-Central Europe by addressing the temporality of transformation from a predominantly historical perspective, but also in dialogue with the social sciences. It focuses on the four countries that form the core of East-Central Europe – Czechia, Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary – but broadens the perspective by including more general comparisons within the region as well as insightful case studies from other countries. The divergent developments in East-Central Europe after 1989 are explained by investigating the prehistory of transformation in the East-Central European states and societies from various perspectives and for areas as diverse as politics, social affairs, law, economy, culture, and national identity.
The editors
Prof. Dr. Martin Schulze Wessel, Professor, Chair of East and Southeast European History, History Department, LMU Munich; Director of Collegium Carolinum, Research Institute for the History of the Czech Lands and Slovakia, Munich
Dr. Darina Volf, Researcher, Department of East and Southeast European History, LMU Munich
Weitere Informationen zur Schriftenreihe "Bad Wiesseer Tagungen des Collegium Carolinum".