Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe
1996 - 2024
Current editor(s): Andrew Kilmister
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Volume 24, issue 3, 2016
- “States” of informality in post-socialist Europe (and beyond) pp. 181-190

- Abel Polese, Jeremy Morris and Borbala Kovács
- Informality currencies: a tale of Misha, his brigada and informal practices among Uzbek labour migrants in Russia pp. 191-206

- Rustamjon Urinboyev and Abel Polese
- End to informality? Examining the impact of institutional reforms on informal institutions in post-Euromaidan Ukraine pp. 207-221

- Huseyn Aliyev
- Informality as an interpretive filter: translating ubleha in local community development in Bosnia pp. 223-237

- Karla Koutkova
- Socio-economic deficits and informal domestic childcare services in Romania: the policy drivers of the commodification of care from a micro-level perspective pp. 239-254

- Borbála Kovács
- Counterbalancing marketization informally: Georgia’s new-institutionalist reform and its discontents pp. 255-272

- Lela Rekhviashvili
- Regional security governance in the former Soviet space? Researching institutions, actors and practices pp. 273-291

- Alessandra Russo
- The art of not seeing like a state. On the ideology of “informality” pp. 293-306

- Rune Steenberg
- Accomplishing public secrecy: non-monetary informal practices and their concealment at the emergency department pp. 307-320

- Marius Wamsiedel
- Evaluating the multifarious motives for acquiring goods and services from the informal sector in Central and Eastern Europe pp. 321-338

- Colin Williams and Ioana A. Horodnic
Volume 24, issue 2, 2016
- Introduction pp. 111-112

- Andrew Kilmister
- RETRACTED ARTICLE: Bridging the gap: the Serbian struggle for good governance pp. 113-129

- Teresa Cierco
- European Union approaches to human rights violations in Kosovo before and after independence pp. 131-148

- Branislav Radeljić
- Sa(f)ve Bosnia! pp. 149-167

- Ekaterina Entina
- The Dracula dilemma. Tourism, identity and the state in Romania pp. 169-170

- Alex Cistelecan
- Divided subjects, invisible borders: re-unified Germany after 1989 pp. 170-171

- Cynthia Miller-Idriss
- The politics of morality: the church, the state, and reproductive rights in postsocialist Poland pp. 171-173

- Ania Zbyszewska
- Religion and politics in post-socialist Central and Southeastern Europe: challenges since 1989 pp. 173-175

- Tamara Pavasovic Trost
- NSK from ‘Kapital’ to Capital: Neue Slowenische Kunst - an event of the final decade of Yugoslavia pp. 175-176

- Pil Kollectiv and Galia Kollectiv
- Abolishing Prague: essays and interventions pp. 176-178

- The Editors
- Antifascism after Hitler: East German youth and socialist memory, 1949–1989 pp. 178-179

- Grit Wesser
Volume 24, issue 1, 2016
- Introduction pp. 1-2

- Andrew Kilmister
- Media Impact on Youth Political Culture in Present-Day Romania pp. 3-15

- Andrei Alexandru Babadac
- Small Countries in the EU: The Czech Republic Case pp. 17-35

- Petr Kaniok and Robert Majer
- The Romanian Revolution of 1989 and the Veracity of the External Subversion Theory pp. 37-50

- Eduard Rudolf Roth
- Explaining Participation in the Informal Economy in Post-Socialist Societies: A Study of the Asymmetry between Formal and Informal Institutions in Croatia pp. 51-65

- Colin Williams and Josip Franić
- The Impact of the 1985 “Fassbinder Controversy” on Jewish Identity in Germany pp. 67-81

- Joseph Cronin
- The conflict in Ukraine pp. 83-88

- David Mandel
- What internationalism in the context of the Ukrainian crisis? Wide open eyes against one-eyed “campisms” pp. 89-93

- Catherine Samary
- The contradictions of austerity: the socio-economic costs of the neoliberal Baltic model pp. 95-96

- Robert Mikecz
- Critical thinking in Slovakia after socialism pp. 96-97

- James Krapfl
- Constructing Yugoslavia: a transnational history; Remembering Utopia: the culture of everyday life in socialist Yugoslavia pp. 98-101

- Vladimir Unkovski-Korica
- Plante Exotice: Teoria și practica marxiștilor români [Exotic plants: Romanian Marxist theory and practice] pp. 101-103

- Dana Domsodi
- The workers’ state. Industrial labour and the making of socialist Hungary, 1944–1958 pp. 103-106

- Ulf Brunnbauer
- Debating the end of Yugoslavia pp. 106-107

- Ivica Mladenovic
- Notes on Contributors pp. 109-110

- The Editors
Volume 23, issue 2-3, 2015
- Editorial Board pp. (ebi)-(ebi)

- The Editors
- 25 Years of Revolution Comparing Revolt and Transition from Europe 1989 to the Arab World 2014 pp. 99-103

- Marilyn Booth
- Is Social Revolution Still Possible in the Twenty-First Century? pp. 105-150

- Neil Davidson
- Human Rights as Myth and History: Between the Revolutions of 1989 and the Arab Spring pp. 151-166

- Ned Richardson-Little
- From Colour Revolutions to the Arab Spring: The Role of Civil Society in Democracy Building and Transition Processes pp. 167-179

- Anastasiia Kudlenko
- Comparing International Dimensions of Revolutionary Situations: The cases of Egypt 2011 and Turkey 2013 pp. 181-194

- Derya Göçer Akder and Zelal Özdemir
- Comparative Representations of the Middle East: National Values and Russian State-aligned Media pp. 195-211

- Emma Heywood
- Telling the Stories of Martyrs: The Cases of the Egyptian and Lithuanian Revolutions pp. 213-230

- Ieva Zakarevičiūtė
- Reconstructing Lenin, an intellectual biography pp. 231-234

- Gus Fagan
- Politically unbecoming: postsocialist art against democracy pp. 234-236

- Dave Beech
- Tailoring Truth: Politicizing the Past and Negotiating Memory in East Germany, 1945–1990 pp. 236-238

- Anna Saunders
- Conflict in Ukraine: The Unwinding of the Post-Cold War Order pp. 238-242

- Gregory Schwartz
- Communities in Transition: Protected Nature and Local People in Eastern and Central Europe pp. 242-245

- Enikö Baga
- Contributors to This Issue pp. 247-249

- Anna Thompson
Volume 23, issue 1, 2015
- Introduction pp. 1-2

- Andrew Kilmister
- Introduction to Special Issue on The Politics of East European Area Studies: Disputing Contemporary Identifications pp. 3-8

- Gareth Dale, Katalin Miklóssy and Dieter Segert
- The “Orientalization” and “de-Orientalization” of East Central Europe and the Balkan Peninsula pp. 9-44

- Robert Bideleux
- From Region to Culture, from Culture to Class pp. 45-60

- Alex Cistelecan
- Russian and East European Studies with a Finnish Flavour pp. 61-80

- Katalin Miklóssy
- Is There Really Something Like “Eastern Europe”? And If So, Why Do We Need Area Studies of It? pp. 81-96

- Dieter Segert
- Contributors to This Issue pp. 97-97

- The Editors