Unbroken Ties: The State, Interest Associations, and Corporatism in Post-Soviet Ukraine. By Paul Kubicek. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000. 275p. $49.50
Robert S. Kravchuk
American Political Science Review, 2001, vol. 95, issue 1, 240-241
Abstract:
This year marks the tenth anniversary of Ukraine's historic Declaration of Sovereignty, and the country will celebrate its first full decade of independence in August 2001. Yet, Ukraine's record as an independent state has been disap- pointing at best. Even after ten years, living standards for much of the population continue to fall. Development of civil society has been slow, if nonexistent. Political parties are very much nascent institutions. Opinion surveys indicate high levels of frustration among citizens, coupled with extremely low levels of perceived political efficacy. The economy re- mains dominated by large, inefficient state enterprises and collective farms, dinosaurs left over from the former regime. In many respects, Ukraine appears unable to move forward; the vision of its future has been shaped largely by its recent past.
Date: 2001
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